According to Wikipedia Great Britain 209 331 km². Norway 385 207 km². To travel Norway from the south west to the north east is 2800 km, taking 38 hours. We also have the second longes coastline of any countries, only Canada beats it. Lots of fjords, valleys and mountains. Building roads and other infrastructure is complicated and expensive. Lots of tunnels, bridges. Hard granite rock to blast away.
Yup, the energy system needs a lot of effort. Wind, solar, nuclear, etc. Even in Norway with close to 100% hydro power, the "official numbers" for electricity says only 15% renewable. 23% nuclear, 62% fossil thermal. Source: https://www.nve.no/energy-supply/electr ... isclosure/ The reason is sale of sertificates of renewable electricity to other countries, like Germany.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑08 Nov 2022, 19:21the EU expects to have decarbonised (renewabled) by 2030 38-40% of its electrical energy
so the EV will then still be at least 60% fossil-fueled
So my BEV uses 62% of 2 kWh/10 km fossil energy; 1.24 kWh/10 km. A diesel uses about 5 kWh/10 km fossil energy. (0,5 liter/10 km @ 10 kWh/litre).
I'm getting rooftop solar installed in a couple of months. There's a rush for solar power in Norway now. Electricity prices getting higher, partly due to transfer cables to UK, Germany, Netherlands, Denmark etc. Data from the power system here: https://www.statnett.no/en/for-stakehol ... er-system/ 1100 MW going to Blyth at the moment.