Is your electric vehicle truly environmentally friendly?

Is your electric vehicle truly environmentally friendly?

How ‌green is⁤ your electric ‍vehicle, really?

Your columnist ⁣has just had the bittersweet pleasure of driving along America’s Pacific coast, wind blowing through what is‍ left of his hair, in a new Fisker Ocean electric SUV.⁢ Sweet, because ​he was ‍in⁣ “California mode”—a neat feature that‍ with⁤ the ​touch of a button lowers all windows,‌ including the back windscreen,‌ pulls‌ back the solar-panelled roof, and turns the car into the next best thing to an all-electric convertible. Bitter, because once he ⁣had​ returned the trial vehicle, he had to drive home in his Kia Niro EV, which is smaller, shorter range and has no open roof—call it “rainy Britain mode”. The consolation was that it is about ⁢a tonne lighter, and if you drive an EV, as Schumpeter does, to virtue-signal your low-carbon street cred, being featherweight‌ rather than heavyweight⁣ should​ count.

Except it doesn’t. Just look at the future line-up ​that ‌Fisker,⁢ an EV​ startup, unveiled on August 3rd. It⁤ included: a souped-up, off-road version ​of the Ocean, which Henrik Fisker, ‌the ⁤carmaker’s ‍Danish co-founder, said would be suitable for a monster-truck rally; a “supercar” with a 1,000km (600-mile) range, and a pickup truck straight out of “Yellowstone”—complete with ‌cowboy-hat holder. Granted, there was also an affordable six-seater called Pear. But though Fisker says ‌sustainability is​ one of its founding principles, it is indulging⁤ in a ​trait almost universal among car firms: building bigger, burlier​ cars,⁣ even when they are electric.

There⁣ are two ⁢reasons for this.⁣ The first is profit. As with conventional cars, bigger EVs generate⁢ higher margins. ‌The second is consumer preference. For decades, drivers have ​been opting⁤ for SUVs and pickup trucks ⁢rather ‌than smaller cars, and‌ this ‍now applies⁣ to battery-charged ones. EV drivers, who ​fret about the ⁢availability ⁣of charging infrastructure, want more range, hence bigger batteries. BNEF, a consultancy, says⁤ the ⁢result is that average battery…

2023-08-10 07:34:35
Original from www.economist.com
rnrn

Exit mobile version