Home > Off Topic > New diesel and petrol car production to end in 2035 |
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cass Member Since: 12 Oct 2011 Location: northumberland Posts: 731 |
I don’t doubt the days of the petrol/diesel engine in cars may be numbered but I’m sure that electric isn’t the answer.
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5th Feb 2020 2:33am |
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Lyonhead Member Since: 05 Aug 2017 Location: Cardiff Posts: 349 |
It will be interesting to see where the power is going to come from with all the coal fired power stations being closed, the last being down my neck of the woods and where I used to work, Aberthaw Power Station.
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5th Feb 2020 11:12am |
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Bill Member Since: 18 Nov 2017 Location: Essex / Normandy Posts: 1230 |
Greta is no child , she is 17 dressed down to look 13! Just part of the hype.. Filters are in fact so good that in certain circumstances, when the ambient air is already polluted, a diesel car will tend to extract more particles from the air than it emits. Emissions Analytics worked with........etc etc
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7th Feb 2020 5:53pm |
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Brian Considine Member Since: 15 Apr 2019 Location: Garlinge Posts: 428 |
Technically, in the UK at least Greta is a child for about another 10/11 months.
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7th Feb 2020 11:55pm |
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Red Merle Member Since: 19 Sep 2016 Location: Cornwall Posts: 2158 |
I wish there were an easy solution to this problem. Sadly, depending on Trumpian style climate change denial and pseudoscience isn’t the right answer. |
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8th Feb 2020 4:30am |
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Brian Considine Member Since: 15 Apr 2019 Location: Garlinge Posts: 428 |
Personally I don't see an immediate problem.
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8th Feb 2020 8:34am |
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Red Merle Member Since: 19 Sep 2016 Location: Cornwall Posts: 2158 |
Have you seen how nature is really struggling to deal with the levels of CO2 that we’ve already released? From ocean acidification, through to changes in ocean currents, migration of fish, increased frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, the melting of permafrost (and the potentially catastrophic positive feedback loop possibilities of methane release) to droughts and the unprecedented wildfire events in Australia to extensive flooding and this is before we’ve even breached the 1.5 degree level?
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8th Feb 2020 1:53pm |
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Big Boy R44ROV Member Since: 14 Nov 2011 Location: Ford Hill, Wirral. Not Merseyside Posts: 554 |
Makes you wonder then why manufacturers don't offer LPG as a production alternative, instead of an aftermarket option. LPG is a by product, usually burned off in production. An LPG fuelled engine is 20 times cleaner than the equivalent diesel, and certainly emits significantly less NOx into the atmosphere. Also in the UK, our baseline power reserve is dwindling rapidly, due to a lot of the nuclear stations coming offline and being decommissioned.
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8th Feb 2020 2:43pm |
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Brian Considine Member Since: 15 Apr 2019 Location: Garlinge Posts: 428 |
Yes I have, clearly you did not read my post properly & take it in context. I repeat, we do not need to go for zero this, zero that, just get C02 (or whatever gas is the weeks bogeyman) down & nature will take care of it. World climates have been changing since the dawn of time & will continue to do so. FWIW we do our bit in this household (been recycling paper/cardboard/glass for well over three decades), plan our journeys, go on very few flights, try to eat good nutritious food (not many takeaways) & so on. We can all point the finger at someone else but there is no need for the current attitudes. I'm old enough to have seen changes in the weather/climate over a few decade & realistic enough to appreciate that we can reverse the situation & in a few decades without scrapping every fossil fuelled vehicle in sight (what carbon footprint that ?). I also remember the days when I could travel from Margate (nice fresh sea air) to London for the day (when you could taste the blue/grey haze), end up with a runny nose & look forward to returning to fresh air. In any case, over my working life I have averaged over 1K miles a week breathing in all these "pollutants" at full strength so by all accounts I should be dead, but then again I don't smoke & drink maybe a few units of alcohol a week. My only real environmental extravagance is my FFRRm & I will not be giving that up. Personally, I think that this "knee jerk" reaction for alternatives is not being thought out properly, especially the environmental impact of all the mining/manufacturing/distribution of the "brave new all-electric world". We should be walking towards changing things & looking at what lies round corners, not running before we can see what's round the corners. 2003 Range Rover Vogue TD6 |
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8th Feb 2020 4:01pm |
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Brian Considine Member Since: 15 Apr 2019 Location: Garlinge Posts: 428 |
Only the main &/or busy lines will be electrified & the reason is running costs & costs alone - once the infrastructure is in place electric locomotives are far more efficient (& thus cheaper to run) than diesel. The railway companies do of course get an opportunity to present themselves as environmentally friendly at the same time. 2003 Range Rover Vogue TD6 |
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8th Feb 2020 4:06pm |
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rvbush Member Since: 08 Jan 2016 Location: Leamington Spa Posts: 537 |
The people pushing us down this stupid path are interested in one thing and one thing only, money. In this case it's tax. They have no interest in the 'environment' whatsoever and have no idea what they are talking about with regards to internal combustion engines vs electric and all the challenges that will bring re. infrastructure etc.
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9th Feb 2020 8:17am |
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Brian Considine Member Since: 15 Apr 2019 Location: Garlinge Posts: 428 |
Well said RV.
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9th Feb 2020 9:46am |
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brian1951 Member Since: 07 Nov 2015 Location: Salop Posts: 275 |
Some commonsense RV well put indeed. |
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9th Feb 2020 9:53am |
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Red Merle Member Since: 19 Sep 2016 Location: Cornwall Posts: 2158 |
It's easy to see the uphill struggle that climate scientists have against popular opinion! |
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9th Feb 2020 10:07am |
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