<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<feed version="0.3" xmlns="http://purl.org/atom/ns#">
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://gamma.unpythonic.net/"/>

<title>Jeff Epler's blog</title>
<modified>2016-08-19T14:38:25Z</modified>
<tagline>Photos, electronics, cnc, and more</tagline>
<author><name>Jeff Epler</name><email>jepler@unpythonic.net</email></author>
<entry>
<title>Will an Electric Vehicle save on CO₂ emissions anyway?</title>
<issued>2016-08-19T14:38:25Z</issued>
<modified>2016-08-19T14:38:25Z</modified>
<id>https://gamma.unpythonic.net/01471617505</id>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://gamma.unpythonic.net/01471617505"/>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped">

Warning: Betteridge's Law Applies

&lt;p&gt;tl;dr: Compared to a hybrid like the Toyota Prius, the incremental emissions
for a Tesla using typical US electricity sources are higher.  They just don't
occur at the car's tailpipe.

&lt;p&gt;After recently asking whether a person with my habits could ever save money
driving a Tesla instead of a Prius, I also wondered about per-mile emissions.
&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.wired.com/2016/03/teslas-electric-cars-might-not-green-think/&quot;&gt;Others have investigated the extra costs of EV manufacture and disposal&lt;/a&gt; (many
elements of which apply to a hybrid as well), while my research is only about
the incremental CO₂ emissions created by whatever energy inputs the vehicle
needs.

&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/12D65eQBpzVRa_ixQFlgfiBZZ-RnspogOQn2w5UNa-8Y/edit?usp=sharing&quot;&gt;Here's the spreadsheet itself&lt;/a&gt;, which includes links to sources for each number.

&lt;p&gt;The top result is that the source of electricity makes a huge difference:
China (major electricity source: coal) has 9x the emissions per kWh than France
(major electricity source: nuclear).  Canada has under 50% the emissions of
the US, and I was happy to see that my local electrical utility is 10% under
the US national average.

&lt;p&gt;Using EPA fuel economy and the 2015 US mix, I calculate &lt;b&gt;47.7&lt;/b&gt; lb CO₂/100 miles
in the Tesla, and &lt;b&gt;40.0&lt;/b&gt; in the Prius.  

&lt;p&gt;Of course, if you're comparing the Tesla to an &amp;quot;average&amp;quot; US car, it's a
different story: The 2014 fleet economy for passenger cars is 31.5MPG,
leading to emissions of 71.11 lb CO₂/100 miles.

&lt;p&gt;If you're living in a country that has more nuclear or &amp;quot;renewable&amp;quot; energy,
like France, you'll also come out ahead: with only 0.26 lb CO₂/kWh in 2008,
a Tesla would put only 21% as much CO₂ into the atmosphere as a Prius
running on gasoline.

&lt;p&gt;I also took a stab at how Clinton's clean energy plan would change the
numbers.  My first guess is that it woud lower the lb CO₂/kWh by around
1/3, which still doesn't make us as clean as Canada's 2008 mix.

&lt;p&gt;Finally, I checked how a Prius would do running on E85, assuming that
carbon-neutral ethanol production were actually possible.  This brings
the prius down to 8.34 lb CO₂/100mi, within spitting distance of the cleanest
electricity of countries I surveyed, 8.21 lb CO₂/100mi running a Tesla
off the French grid.
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Does an electric car make economic sense?</title>
<issued>2016-08-11T22:07:54Z</issued>
<modified>2016-08-11T22:07:54Z</modified>
<id>https://gamma.unpythonic.net/01470953274</id>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://gamma.unpythonic.net/01470953274"/>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped">

Warning: Betteridge's Law Applies

&lt;p&gt;I drive 8000 miles a year in a car with 45MPG actual fuel efficiency
(2013 Prius).  We paid somewhere around $23000 for it.  If I drive this
car for 15 years, I'll buy around 2700 gallons of gas.

&lt;p&gt;Compare this to the (discontinued) Prius Plugin Hybrid with MSRP of
about $30000.  Imagine that I could have done all my driving in electric
mode, and that its efficiency is ∞MPGe.  I'd break even on the $7000
higher initial price if the average gas price is $2.56.  Sounds
plausible that I could save money that way, right?

&lt;p&gt;But of course I couldn't go everywhere in &amp;quot;all-electric&amp;quot; / &amp;quot;charge
depletion&amp;quot; mode, probably only about 2000 miles/year out of my 8000
miles/year would fall into this category (in-city driving 200 days a
year at 10 miles/day).  So now I'm only saving only about 670 gallons of
gas *OVER THE COURSE OF OWNING THE CAR FOR 15 YEARS*.  This is only
break-even if gas is $10/gallon.

&lt;p&gt;But of course, the plug-in hybrid is not ∞MPGe, it's 110MPGe.
MPGe is actually &amp;quot;miles per 33.7kWh&amp;quot;.  33.7kWh of electricity costs $3.17
in my local market at summer rates, or $1.88 at winter rates, an average
of $2.31 (only 4 months are &amp;quot;summer&amp;quot;).  So that's $623 in electricity to
operate the thing in electric mode for 30,000 miles.  This pushes
the break-even point higher, to around $11/gal gasoline. (&lt;b&gt;Note:&lt;/b&gt; a
previous version of this page used incorrect math to arrive at a figure
of $19 as the break-even point)
</content>
</entry>
</feed>
