Plug-in hybrids would reduce greenhouse-gas emissions, says new study
Plug-in hybrid vehicles, long extolled here at Grist HQ, seem always to elicit one question from doubters: Wouldn't running cars on electricity just mean more emissions from power plants? Answer: No! According to a new study from the Electric Power Research Institute and the Natural Resources Defense Council, widespread use of plug-in hybrids -- which can travel up to 40 miles before using any gas, and can exceed 100 miles per gallon -- would significantly reduce U.S. greenhouse-gas emissions, regardless of the energy source. Even if only 20 percent of U.S. drivers owned a plug-in by 2050, says the study, annual emissions would drop by 163 million tons. And if most Americans made the switch, the effect would equal removing about a third of the cars on U.S. roads. The study also dismissed the fear that plug-in technology would overload the grid. In sum: plug-ins -- though unlikely to be commercially available for a few more years, and probably pretty spendy when they do arrive -- are the shiznit.
straight to the source: Los Angeles Times, Martin Zimmerman, 20 Jul 2007
straight to the source: San Francisco Chronicle, Zachary Coile, 20 Jul 2007
discuss in Gristmill: New study finds that plug-in hybrids rule in all possible futures
see also, in Grist: Ford, Southern California Edison partner to test plug-in hybrids
Comments
View as Threaded
danielbarker123 Posted 4:11 am
23 Jul 2007
After the recent hurricanes we experienced and residents stranded on highways, FEMA stated that residents should carry additional fuel in case of stuck in traffic.
I wrote FEMA that an electric car consumes no power when it is not moving, a small amount of power when it is moving slowly, and creates power when it is decelerated.
Permalink