Problem is, both sides have something to gain...tricky, eh.
Problem is, both sides have something to gain...tricky, eh.
Well... car makers could start really innovative active safety. Current cars are engineered around crash tests. They doubled in weight the past decades, doubled the power and still reduced consumption. If, with (semi) autonomous driving, just like planes, cars could reduce in weight dramatically and become truly efficient instead being constructed to hit a concrete barrier at 60 kph.Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑08 Oct 2018, 23:59So this can only be achieved by reducing fuel consumption by 40%. I think it is highly unlikely that ICE's can be improved by this amount. So all cars sold will need to be (plug-in) hybrid at least? I wonder how it will be regulated since you can drive a plug-in hybrid just on petrolSteven wrote: ↑08 Oct 2018, 13:05More related to the original, car-related post, I'd like to add that the EU parliament recently agreed to target a 40% emission decrease from new cars by 2030.
https://www.dw.com/en/european-parliame ... a-45742019
MEPs in the parliament argued that accelerated decarbonization was required in transport — the only major EU sector in which greenhouse gas emissions are still rising.
The draft law, including a report adopted by most parliamentarians, will next be negotiated with the EU executive commission on October 10, a day after EU ministers deliberate on the package.
Existing EU rules set targets for the average emissions across carmakers' fleets. The next set kicks in in 2021, and will call for an average set of CO2 emissions no higher than 95 grams per kilometer driven. Wednesday's 2030 target proposal would be a 40 percent reduction of this 2021, 95 gram figure.
ICE cars are not allowed to be sold in Norway by 2025, and in the Netherlands by 2030.
I realise you've run out of fingers, but that's a factor of 10 error. Meanwhile the residents of Florida will have to invest in a couple of rows of bricks, in some places.henry wrote: ↑08 Oct 2018, 09:00So that’s just 1.5m. The good people of Florida will be happy at that news. Except that it won’t stop after 50 years.Greg Locock wrote: ↑08 Oct 2018, 05:06This one certainly looks a tad overblown
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/imag ... W4zaC9Tx1Q
Actual rise has been 3mm per year, or less.
You’re right and I’m wrong. Pleased to be corrected. I’ll use other peoples fingers in future.Greg Locock wrote: ↑09 Oct 2018, 04:57I realise you've run out of fingers, but that's a factor of 10 error. Meanwhile the residents of Florida will have to invest in a couple of rows of bricks, in some places.henry wrote: ↑08 Oct 2018, 09:00So that’s just 1.5m. The good people of Florida will be happy at that news. Except that it won’t stop after 50 years.Greg Locock wrote: ↑08 Oct 2018, 05:06This one certainly looks a tad overblown
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/imag ... W4zaC9Tx1Q
Actual rise has been 3mm per year, or less.
One way to really have an impact on transport-created CO2 is car sharing. Instead of two cars going from A to B each with one occupant, one car doing the journey with two occupants. That basically halves the fuel used and the pollutants produced. Takes no technical advancement of any sort. It does require social changes, however. But then climate chnage mitigation is a social engieering issue, not a technical engineering issue.Jolle wrote: ↑09 Oct 2018, 01:29Well... car makers could start really innovative active safety. Current cars are engineered around crash tests. They doubled in weight the past decades, doubled the power and still reduced consumption. If, with (semi) autonomous driving, just like planes, cars could reduce in weight dramatically and become truly efficient instead being constructed to hit a concrete barrier at 60 kph.
But most of the co2 reduction is possible to do transport much more efficient and have more efficient food production. For transport, in Europe, only 25% the total trucks-on-the-road is used.
So. Time to invest in a autonomous road grid, smarter transport and a shift to a more plant based diet and those goals are very much achievable.
The new WLTP emission tests also include a cycle in which they test hybrids with empty and half-empty batteries. I don't think you can enforce much more, except to make sure that electricity is cheaper than fuel, which will automatically drive people towards making sure they recharge their hybrid cars.Jolle wrote: ↑09 Oct 2018, 01:29Well... car makers could start really innovative active safety. Current cars are engineered around crash tests. They doubled in weight the past decades, doubled the power and still reduced consumption. If, with (semi) autonomous driving, just like planes, cars could reduce in weight dramatically and become truly efficient instead being constructed to hit a concrete barrier at 60 kph.Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑08 Oct 2018, 23:59So this can only be achieved by reducing fuel consumption by 40%. I think it is highly unlikely that ICE's can be improved by this amount. So all cars sold will need to be (plug-in) hybrid at least? I wonder how it will be regulated since you can drive a plug-in hybrid just on petrol
ICE cars are not allowed to be sold in Norway by 2025, and in the Netherlands by 2030.
But most of the co2 reduction is possible to do transport much more efficient and have more efficient food production. For transport, in Europe, only 25% the total trucks-on-the-road is used.
So. Time to invest in a autonomous road grid, smarter transport and a shift to a more plant based diet and those goals are very much achievable.
What do real climate scientists have to gain? I'm curious.Problem is, both sides have something to gain...tricky, eh.
So manually driven cars are automatically dangerous?you risk in your modern car to be trashed by an older, manually driven car that smashes into you at high speed.
Taken in context, it's obvious that he means that if new autonomous cars were built lighter on the basis that they might crash less often (as was suggested by a previous poster), an impact with an older, current today, design of big, heavy car would be much more dangerous.
strad wrote: ↑08 Oct 2018, 23:32They are the ones that were caught lying and admitted to falsifying the facts.So United Nations and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) don´t listen to facts because they heard otherwise on TV?
They did make many predictions that have failed to come about.
The 61 or whatever the number is that released this newest report are the same group made up of mostly politicians and not scientists with climate specialties that made up the previous reports.
It is not so important which side you want to believe so much as you be willing to research both sides.
We have been thru this before. Now it's less that 1°C that they are freaking about? Come on.
Read some books that don't re-enforce you preconceived ideas. Look at both sides.
I have and I have learned to not believe liars that have something to gain.
In September 2018 EV market share in Norway was 45,3% ! 60,1% if we include plug-in hybrids.Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑08 Oct 2018, 23:59ICE cars are not allowed to be sold in Norway by 2025, and in the Netherlands by 2030.
"Preservation of our environment is not a liberal or conservative challenge, it's common sense."