MellowJohnny
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Christian
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2021
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- 95
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- 2,832
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- YYZ
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- 2022 Mach-E Premium AWD
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- Solution Architect
I read this article yesterday and came away a bit confused.
The real thrust of the article seems to be that hybrids are better than BEVs:
She uses a study comparing a Tesla Model Y to a Kia Niro hybrid to make her case: "From a CO2 perspective, the Tesla is better, but not significantly so. You have to weigh the extra CO2 reduction against the increased tire emissions, said Molden." Why? Microplastics are bad, but they are not the same as CO2 emissions - we are trying to address climate change with BEVs, not specifically reduce overall "pollution". This comparison completely misses the point of a BEV.
The over-all tone and choice of words is very anti-EV. She points out "Yet, not all automakers are onboard with the electric vehicle push. Last week, leading automakers criticized President Joe Biden's plan, which aims for two-thirds of new vehicle sales to be electric by 2032, calling it "overly optimistic." Source?
There is just no balance in the article - no mention of the work tire manufacturers are doing to reduce pollution. It's not journalism...there seems to be a hidden agenda here.
Maybe earth.com is legit, but this article doesn't pass the sniff test for me.
The real thrust of the article seems to be that hybrids are better than BEVs:
She uses a study comparing a Tesla Model Y to a Kia Niro hybrid to make her case: "From a CO2 perspective, the Tesla is better, but not significantly so. You have to weigh the extra CO2 reduction against the increased tire emissions, said Molden." Why? Microplastics are bad, but they are not the same as CO2 emissions - we are trying to address climate change with BEVs, not specifically reduce overall "pollution". This comparison completely misses the point of a BEV.
The over-all tone and choice of words is very anti-EV. She points out "Yet, not all automakers are onboard with the electric vehicle push. Last week, leading automakers criticized President Joe Biden's plan, which aims for two-thirds of new vehicle sales to be electric by 2032, calling it "overly optimistic." Source?
There is just no balance in the article - no mention of the work tire manufacturers are doing to reduce pollution. It's not journalism...there seems to be a hidden agenda here.
Maybe earth.com is legit, but this article doesn't pass the sniff test for me.
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