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Are coal-powered electric cars really better for the environment?

Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by Octane, Apr 20, 2011.

  1. Octane

    Octane Proud Member of 100 MPG Club

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    Are coal-powered electric cars really better for the environment?

    A Nissan Leaf takes a 24-kilowatt charge to go an estimated 100 miles. (Driving styles can vary that a bit up or down.) So 1.6 pounds of carbon, times 24 kilowatts equals 38.4 pounds of carbon to charge up a Leaf from zero to 100 percent on TECO's grid.

    A similar gas-powered car, the Nissan Versa, would burn about 3.571 gallons to go that same 100-mile distance as the Leaf does on a charge. Burning a gallon of gasoline emits an estimated 19.4 pounds of carbon. So the Versa would produce about 69.28 pounds of carbon. Driving the Leaf results in a carbon emission savings of 44.6-percent.

    Political idiocy. As if "pounds of carbon" as a measurement has any benefit as some sort of comparative metric. 24 kilowatts requires about 27 lbs of coal to be burned for that amount of electricity to be distributed to the charging station. Then, knock off a few more percent efficiency getting the energy into the Leaf.

    So, you need to burn more than 27 lbs of coal to get the equivalent of 24 lbs of gasoline. Just consider your Leaf as having a tender containing 120 lbs of coal to get you the equivalent of a tank of gas. But know with your misleading metric you think you are putting out 44.6% less carbon dioxide. Please don't mention sulfur dioxide, NOx, CO, radium, thallium, and uranium you are generating by burning coal, either.

    (Of course, the technical content was probably provided by Tampa Electric, so they do have a bit of a bias.)
     
  2. Skoorbmax

    Skoorbmax Senior Member

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    Although the Leaf and Versa are similar is not a more meaningful comparison honestly comparing it to a Prius (since the Leaf is a natural "progression" from hybrid)? 100 miles is two gallons so basically *dead on* same carbon output.

    I know coal is huge, but I wonder how this comparison would look with oil-burning power plants (worse? better?) or nuclear.
     
  3. billnchristy

    billnchristy Active Member

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    Personally I wouldn't own a full electric unless I could also afford the personal infrastructure of wind or solar power to charge it.
     
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  4. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    Don't forget that extracting, refining, and distributing gasoline has a similar overhead.

    Tom
     
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  5. Octane

    Octane Proud Member of 100 MPG Club

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    Well, what's not accounted for is the extracting, refining and distributing the coal to the power plant, either.
     
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  6. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    You did, right here:

    Tom
     
  7. Octane

    Octane Proud Member of 100 MPG Club

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    No, I didn't. I assumed the coal was sitting at the door of the boiler and that the gasoline was in the tank, i.e. the fuel already delivered to its place of being burned.

    I said knock off a few more points for moving the electricity off the charging station through the on board power converter into the Leaf battery.
     
  8. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    The article appears to be mixing up pounds of carbon with pounds of CO2. CO2 is 44/12 heavier than C on a mole equivalent basis. Petrol cars emit 19.2 pounds of CO2 (not carbon) per combusted gallon.

    From a Google search:
    Coal power plants are about 32% efficient as a national average, and
    3413 btu = 1 kwh.

    Do the math for confirmation, but the bottom line is that 100 miles in a Nissan Versa emits about half the CO2 than 100 miles in a Nissan LEAF using the Tampa electric figures.
     
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  9. Corwyn

    Corwyn Energy Curmudgeon

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    To add to the confusion, I don't imagine there is a single location which is using coal exclusively in their electricity mix.

    The Leaf and the Prius are probably near the same CO2 output on average. The advantage the Leaf has is that if the grid is cleaned up, the Leaf is cleaned up right along with it; while gasoline in the Prius is always going to be producing CO2 when burned.
     
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  10. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    Okay, fair enough. Don't forget to knock off a few points for gas storage at the station and pumping costs for refueling. We should probably also consider consumable parts such as fuel filters on pumps, and the cost of maintaining mechanical pumps. This will be offset by the costs associated with chargers, but being electronic devices, wear and replacement should be much less.

    Tom
     
  11. hyo silver

    hyo silver Awaaaaay

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    The answer to that question is to build more sustainable power plants, and reduce the use of fossil fuels. Ignoring the 'teach the controversy' crap in the news would probably help, too.
     
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  12. Octane

    Octane Proud Member of 100 MPG Club

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    hyo, that's equivalent to saying that the answer to pigs tracking dung all over their pen is to raise the flying version of them. That way, they never touch the ground.

    Coal plants aren't going away. Thermodynamics of electricity production aren't going to change radically. Nothing exists nor is on the immediate horizon which will replace fossil fuel burning to supply our country's needs--especially after the Fukushima catastrophe. It's fossil fuel (mainly coal) in the power plant or gasoline/diesel in the ICE.
     
  13. TonyPSchaefer

    TonyPSchaefer Your Friendly Moderator
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    Agreed.
    Remember when the solar panels collapsed and trapped all those miners? Remember when that offshore wind farm exploded and polluted the entire Gulf Coast?

    Me neither.
     
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  14. The Electric Me

    The Electric Me Go Speed Go!

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    Actually I read the book by one of the surviving Solar Panel Miners. "A Sunny Day In Hell. 31 days Trapped in a Solar Panel Mine." Riveting.
     
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  15. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    Well I will agree here completely. The amount of people that will buy EV and PHEV cars are very small. If you compare the ghg savings versus a conventional small car or hybrid it is tiny. The case for electrification must be on something other than ghg. And to start out let's remove that little false statement in this paragraph, cars don't have coal chuts like steam locomotives. We are not building new steam engines to get these things moving.

    Well I disagree that the car is running on coal, but let's not ignore the NOx, SOx, and other harmful substances. This discussion also just pertains to the united states. NOx and SOx are capped, so additional demand does not release more into the environment. Mercury has cap proposals and should be implemented. NOx and particulates are point sources of pollution. These can be controlled much easier at power plants than in mobile things like cars that concentrate these ill effects in many big cities. The prius does really well here but not many buy prii, ev and phev provide more choices. The other environmental disaster for gas involves with the measures needed to get more of a resource running out. We already have plants trying to make more synthetic with natural gas, and I'm sure this will turn to coal. You can not discount the gulf oil spill, the Persian gulf oil fires, or even the little things of a fuel truck crashing and spilling a great deal before it was loaded into another truck. Add that oil is the majority of the trade deficit, or part of the reason we spend so much treasure and lives with our military.

    The easiest way to reduce the costs to the environment of coal is to kill the gradfather clause of the clean air act. TVA just was finnally brought to justice for illegally using this clause on modified plants and will remove a large number.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/15/science/earth/15tva.html

    95% of the new plants constructed in the last decade were gas not coal, and if you include renewables and closing of coal plants the grid is getting cleaner. Adding more EV and PHEV versus gasoline, along with the independent greening of the grid is a net economic and environmental winner.
     
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  16. hyo silver

    hyo silver Awaaaaay

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    Where I come from, electricity is nearly 100% hydro. There's room for more, and vast potential for geothermal we've only begun to explore. There's no way the residents will ever use it all. So, instead of whining that things will never change, run some wires this direction.

    Or put up some solar panels. Surely Florida has enough sunshine to charge a few cars? Why are you still burning coal?

    edit: Or gasoline?!
     
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  17. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    No.

    First of all, the cap is proposed and yet to be enacted. Second, it only applies to part of the US. Texas, e.g. and the entire west coast, is not included. Third, as soon as republicans are in power the caps will increase or be scrapped completely. If you doubt their desire to do so you have not been paying attention to the federal budget wrangling.
     
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  18. MSantos

    MSantos EcoAccelerometry

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    Same here as well. In fact, we export quite a bit of CO2 free electricity to our US neighbors on a regular basis. ;)

    And I agree that while coal can't be easily displaced there's is too much potential in other sources to be had and the only thing lacking is a forward looking backbone on the part of some..

    Cheers;

    MSantos
     
  19. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    I looked at the article again. Not only is the writer comparing C to CO2 unknowingly, he does not distinguish kw from kwh. Does this pass for journalism in Florida ? Or is the entire readership tea-baggers ?
     
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  20. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    We can drill down to individual cases if you like. There is wrangling as to the new CO2 regulations but not to increasing the amounts of NOx and SOx. There is talk of decreasing these caps, and if we remove grandfathered plants the caps can be decreased with no additional costs.

    Now lets look at what is happening in your fear states Texas and California where many of the new electrified cars will go. ERCOT the texas grid that would have the ev car growth has always been treated differently. SO2 and NOx reduction have been done as part of regulation not the federal cap and trade program. As such these are being produced at less than half the level they were in 1995. The epa has tentatively approved an ercot only cap and trade program on these pollutants. Regulation or cap and trade can only reduce the amount of ERCOT NOx and SO2 pollution. If ercot had been part of federal cap and trade it is likely the coal states would be producing more of these pollutants and bought the credits from texas utilities. Phase 1 of cap and trade was done where the problems were the worst, not the best. ERCOT is adding more renewable energy than any of the rest of the countries grids. Next up is California, which has pledged to add no new coal plants, and is raising renewables to 33% in the next decade. Neither of these grids are going to get dirtier when these cars are added.

    Clean the grid for its own sake. Add EV and PHEV cars to reduce gasoline usage.