You have completely missed the point of the article.RedNEO wrote: ↑31 Dec 2020, 11:50What a useless article. It even says at the beginning that battery powered cars don’t get there electric from carbon free sources most of the time but wants to claim somehow that it’s good for the environment if you ignore that the electric is gotten from dirty sources.gruntguru wrote: ↑31 Dec 2020, 06:07https://citymonitor.ai/horizons/electri ... cities-865hollus wrote: ↑29 Dec 2020, 14:37OK, this is massively off topic, but I am going to ask for a link to that 1C from ICEs if you have it. The heat island effect is well known, but that would suggest that ICEs contribute most of the heat. And (almost) all energy consumption goes eventually to heat, so it would imply that ICEs account for most of the energy consumption in cities...
I'll split this to a new thread if it drags along.
P.S. your degree is probably Fahrenheit, isn't it? Where I come from the degrees are larger. That would explain it.
Electric cars, according to research by scientists from Michigan State University, produce only about one fifth of this heat over the course of an average mile. When you multiply that by the number of cars on the road worldwide, that means an awful lot less heat created on roads.If what the researchers have found is true, replacing city cars with electric ones could reduce the urban heat island effect pretty dramatically. The researchers used Beijing’s scorching 2012 summer as an example, and found that the use of electric cars could have reduced the temperature across the city by 0.94°C. This would, in turn, have reduced air conditioning usage by 14.44m kilowatt hours, and reduced daily CO2 emissions by 10,686 tonnes.