Automation in general is going massively reduce the workforce in the future already starting look at supermarket tills, call centres etc they are semi automated already
Automation in general is going massively reduce the workforce in the future already starting look at supermarket tills, call centres etc they are semi automated already
That's 85,788 gallons a dayConsumption: 13.8 tonnes/hour or 390,000 litres per day.
A plane like a Boeing 747 uses approximately 1 gallon (about 4 litres) of fuel every second. Over the course of a 10-hour flight, it might burn 36,000 gallons (150,000 litres). The 747 burns approximately 5 gallons of fuel per mile (12 litres of fuel per kilometre).
And they are still sailing still flying, and no dead lines.
Oh well that's alright then, let's not bother doing anything for the planetThat's 85,788 gallons a day
Then we have planes -
Oh well that's alright then, let's not bother doing anything for the planet
I don't believe the 25% figure for HGV's most are on the road 24 hours a day and do about 8mpg burning diesel those using AdBlue are in a huge minority so the majority are old and have hundreds of thousands of miles on the clock.Agree you have to start somewere, how about at the top,
Even current technology is good enough for people with ordinary bladders and rate-of-tiredness, and there are already cars on sale that can do 300 miles in 10 minutes. People get all theoretical about it but the technology is good enough in the real world.After a coffee and a toilet trip we were on our way in 20 minutes with an extra 120 miles of range in the battery.
Probably better off at the garage just by the Sandbach junction just up the road...An hour or so up the road Mrs Jocky wanted a McDonald’s so we stopped at Sandbach services off the M6.
I had no need to charge, but thought I’d take a look anyway... A busy services, only three chargers, and all out of order.
To be fair the photo showed BP chargers - but BP also charge through the nose for petrol on motorways, they're always 160+p if not 170+p/litre.they are always empty, probably because they charge upwards of 75p/kWh making charging 10 times more expensive than home and also much more expensive than diesel or petrol.
Another owner said they need to do away with apps a lot of older drivers hate them they often don't work.
Another said they need to show the price at the charging station like they do at a petrol station so you can drive past if the price is too high
Already happened under the Public Charge Point Regulations 2023 which came in on 24 November 2023 and which since 24 November 2024 have required all new public charge points > 8kW and existing charge points >50kW to support ordinary contactless debit cards, and prominent displays of pricing.Completely agree, every charge station should have signage showing what the price is, and it should change as off-peak prices kick in etc
And every charge station should just have a contactless payment pad in the same way as a petrol pump.
There's only ~32 million cars in the UK. I did the sums back in 2020 assuming 330Wh per mile for cars (ie~3 miles per kWh) and came up with a ballpark figure just under 18GW continuous to replace all road transport (trucks, buses, cars, everything) - or 54GW for 8 hours each night. Yes that's a lot, but it's doable - network capacity is around 70GW, and eg there's plans to add 60GW of wind power alone. And now 4 miles per kWh is becoming common (which would reduce the continuous requirement to 13.5GW), and Lucid have a car doing 5 miles/kWh (ie need <11GW continuous, 33GW overnight) and are talking about 6 miles/kWh for their next car.Public chargers or not, I still maintain that charging over 40 million cars is a lot of electric, and we don't really have a prayer of charging that lot and keeping the lights on.
Given Ireland's dependence (at present) on the GB interconnector I wouldn't get too cocky...In other news, ESB have confirmed that there’s no shortage of electrons on the island of Ireland. You lot on the UK mainland may not be so lucky.
The AA have seen callouts due to being out of juice go down from 8.24% of EV callouts in 2015 to 1.85% in 2024, and expect it to drop further to match the 1% of petrol cars. And their patrols have batteries to get you to the next charging station.Well, when your tenners worth of electrons run out, you won't be able to lug the battery a mile to the nearest charging point will you.
So that's another £50-100 a year on breakdown recovery.
No - it's the other way round. Where we're heading is for batteries being the short-term solution, but only capable of covering up to maybe 3-4 days, there may be a place for eg compressed air storage for 3-6 days, and the current working assumption of eg the Climate Change Committee is that hydrogen will only be called on for the rare, once-a-year-ish times when there's no wind power for 7-14 days. Hydrogen is expensive and the infrastructure is nowhere near ready, hydrogen blends are pretty much a waste of time as you can only add small amounts which doesn't really work given its low energy content.The green hydrogen could be stored and used in gas fired power stations as a short to medium term solution until sold state batteries are commercially viable....Yes batteries or super capacitors etc will be the efficient long term solution but there is a short term answer staring them in the face
The national security argument runs the other way - wouldn't it be better to power cars and heating by electricity generated in the UK, rather than relying on imports for 50% of our oil and gas, some of which comes eg past Iran and the Houthis? If we didn't have that dependency that would be one less reason to care about / get involved in wars in the Middle East.If Electrical Power is the only way forward, it'll make winning a war so much easier.
Just pull the plug.
Just look at the "accidents" in the Baltic sea at them moment. Power, Data and Gas line damage.
The US is way behind the rest of the world though. Norway is at 90% of new cars being electric. The world's biggest car market is China, which was 51.8% electric in September. The UK was 25.1% in November, EU 17.3% in September, but the US was only 8.9% in Q3.I think the US and the UK are miles apart on this.
Elon Musk is in bed with Mr Trump, that makes electric cars in the the US a self-fulfilling prophecy that will happen quite quickly in real terms. Thre it is achievable.
It comes down to the paralysis of the last government who basically gave up on governing for several years - this is the sort of boring stuff that just hasn't been happening.Going back, I just wonder why the powers to be don't do things that would have a significant impact on clean electricity generation....
Would it not be a good idea to make solar on the roofs of all these buildings mandatory, if they want planing permision?
There are incentives, namely the Workplace Charging Scheme, which gives £350 per socket.They could either make the units and fitting tax free, give insentives or something, but no.
Network Rail is committed to net zero by 2045 in Scotland and 2050 in the rest of its network, so there's quite a lot happening but mostly behind the scenes, including a plan to electrify all city-to-city routes. Looks like you'll see the busy "middle" of all routes electrified, then hybrid trains that can switch to battery power for the less busy "ends" of the routes.Is there a plan to phase out diesel lorries and locomotives, if there is I haven’t heard anything. Both are significant polluters and should be phased out in line with cars.
Electrifying the railways would create jobs and is a better option than HS2.
One person's job is another person's cost, someone has to pay their wages (or save money by not paying them).There are going to be a lot of people out of work over the next few years
No one is saying do nothing but why is it always the car driver that gets hit, no VED on electric cars then suddenly they introduce it and why has the date got to be 2030 why not 2040 or beyond, cars and vans produce 48% (probably a lot less now due to AdBlue) wagons produce 25% i don't see the government telling all HGV manufacturers they have to be BEV by 2030 then there is the other 37% burning fossil fuel no date announced for them its a case of hit the car drivers they wont do anything about it other than moan
AdBlue is about controlling nitrogen oxides which form smog, it's not about carbon dioxide/climate change. See my calculation above - there's over 60 cars for every truck in the UK, and the cars do 272 billion miles versus 17 billion by truck. So even allowing for mpg, the cars are a bigger target.I don't believe the 25% figure for HGV's most are on the road 24 hours a day and do about 8mpg burning diesel those using AdBlue are in a huge minority so the majority are old and have hundreds of thousands of miles on the clock.
Most cars are driven to work sit outside for 8 hours then are driven home so for the majority 2 hours use a day with more modern clean engines cars are not the problem.
But they are.Why do they lump vas in with cars cars are not commercial vehicles the reason why is to make cars look like the biggest polluter which as i said above they are not
Quite....unfortunately some people will blindly accept anything given as fact without challenging it
Already happened under the Public Charge Point Regulations 2023 which came in on 24 November 2023 and which since 24 November 2024 have required all new public charge points > 8kW and existing charge points >50kW to support ordinary contactless debit cards, and prominent displays of pricing.
Why do they lump vans in with cars cars are not commercial vehicles the reason why is to make cars look like the biggest polluter which as i said above they are not
But they are.
Northern_Brewer said:
Already happened under the Public Charge Point Regulations 2023 which came in on 24 November 2023 and which since 24 November 2024 have required all new public charge points > 8kW and existing charge points >50kW to support ordinary contactless debit cards, and prominent displays of pricing.
Enter your email address to join: