| VIEWPOINT: Why Not Switch to Electric Cars? |
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VIEWPOINT: Why Not Switch to Electric Cars?
By Doug Korthof
There is more than enough off-peak electricity available to easily
allow the transfer of all of our driving miles from gasoline- to
electric-powered vehicles. We hear a lot of empty talk about attaining
energy Independence and about reducing our need for overseas imported
oil. But absolutely nothing is being done by our oily political
leaders. Yet there is something that people have found they can do, and
which bears out the axiom "when the people lead, the leaders follow."
There is a small but surprisingly unyielding number of people who adopt
the "PV-EV" way of living, using solar Photo-Voltaic ("PV") panels to
generate more electricity than they can use and driving a plug-in
electric vehicle ("EV") to soak up some of that power. The only
impediments to expansion of this small number are the loss of our solar
panel industry to foreign companies and the failure of our leaders to
make plug-in electric cars available for sale on the open market. There
is more than enough off-peak electricity to easily allow the transfer
of all of our driving miles from gasoline- to electric-powered
vehicles. That's an exciting prospect, but for now let's just see how
we can eliminate overseas oil imports. Here's the math in California,
which has the figures readily available, and which consumes 12% of the
country's gasoline: California uses 280 million gallons of gasoline per
week. At the fleet average of 20 miles per gallon ("mpg"), that's 5,600
million miles per week. On an average day, Californians drive 800
million miles burning fuel derived from petroleum. The RAV4-EV-not even
the most efficient EV-gets four miles for each kilowatt-hour ("kWh") of
energy it holds.Dividing 80 million daily miles by four miles per kWh
means we would need 200 million kWh to convert all miles driven in
gasoline-fueled cars to miles powered by electric RAV4-EVs or other,
even more efficient electric vehicles.
In California, our installed capacity is 60,000 megawatts and
off-peak unused capacity is about 30,000 megawatts for 18 hours
(integrating under the curve on the state website,caiso.com), or about
540,000 megawatt-hours. That's 540 million kWh of unused electric
capacity per day. That's more than the 200 million kWh per day it would
take to convert ALL oil-fueled miles to electric-powered miles, by a
substantial margin, and without building one new power plant.
Replacing 40% of our oil energy with off-peak electric power
would eliminate the need for all overseas oil imports. Even replacing
just a fraction, merely 40%, of our oil with off-peak electric power
would eliminate the need for all overseas oil imports. Using only
Canadian, Mexican, and Alaskan oil, we would be self-sufficient, no
longer dependent on the Middle East, Nigeria, Indonesia nor even
Columbia and Venezuela.
We’d only need 80 million kWh per day to convert 40% of our oil used
to electric power, enough to attain energy independence. It’s a lot
easier to control environmental impact Of one power plant than one
million tailpipes. That can easily be done without building a single
new power plant, even in the high-demand peak summertime period.
Running at constant capacity is also more efficient, since big
generators wear more quickly when ramped up and down every day.
Using off-peak electric would actually improve production
efficiencies. And as for pollution, our power plants are 97% cleaner
than gasoline. It’s a lot easier to control environmental impact of one
power plant than one million tailpipes.
If we install rooftop solar power, it gets even easier to attain
energy independence. Solar power, distributed throughout the city,
provides a backup in case of grid failure, and becomes a helpful
adjunct to the grid in meeting peak daytime demand.
Solar power decreases daytime peak usage, making the surplus even
bigger. Even a small rooftop solar system can produce 25 kWh of
electric per day, at the most critical time-peak summer daytime
demand period.
Governor Schwarzenegger is planning to spend $20 billion on new
out-of-state power plants and transmission lines. If that were spent
instead here in California, it would provide incentives for homeowners
to install rooftop solar power. At $10,000 per house, that money would
enable 2 million houses to install solar panels, which would be an
additional 50 million kWh per day. And the value would belong to the
California homeowner instead of being spent on a coal plant.
This minimal use of solar alone would almost be enough to replace 40%
of our oil usage. This is made possible by the fact that the EV is up
to 10 times as efficient as a gasoline car, which enables so little
electricity to replace so much gasoline and other oil-based fuels.
The all-electric Toyota RAV4-EV travels about 140 miles on the
energy equivalent of a gallon of gasoline. At 4 miles per kWh, the
all-electric plug-in Toyota RAV4-EV travels about 140 miles on the
energy equivalent of a gallon of gasoline (at 35 kWh per gallon). More
aerodynamic EVs, such as the General Motors EV1, get 6 miles out of
each kWh, or about 200 iles per gallon gas equivalent (“mpgge”).
Compare the efficiency of an EV to a gas car over 100 miles. A Hummer,
Suburban or Navigator, at 10 mpg, takes 10 gallons to go 100 miles. Our
fleet average car gets 20 mpg, and requires 5 gallons to go 100 miles.
Even a Prius, at 50 mpg, takes 2 gallons of gas to go 100 miles. The
aerodynamic Honda Insight takes 1.6 gallons of gas to go 100 miles. But
an EV goes 100 miles with no gasoline and no oil, on the energy
quivalent of less than one gallon of gasoline. No smog checks, no
exhaust, no tune-ups, no oil changes.
An EV is anywhere from twice to ten times more energy efficient than a
gasoline car. But energy efficiency is only part of the advantage of
EVs: the EV uses no gas at all, and can be sourced from a rooftop
distributed solar photo-voltaic array.
This combination of “PV-EV”--a solar array providing seemingly
unlimited power credits and an electric vehicle to use them--allows
living essentially “oil- free.” PV-EV practitioners sail past gas
stations, and never worry about the cost of gasoline. When you drive
free of cost and free of gasoline, buying gas seems like the rip-off
that it really is, and paying the oil company seems like throwing money
into the sewer.
We are proving this possible right now, and have been doing so for
the past seven years. Our solar PV system produces more than enough kWh
credits (we get a time-of-use benefit for charging off-peak), and we
drive a lot--up to 40,000 miles per year on two cars, 20,000 miles for
each RAV4-EV. Those miles are driven in kWh, meaning no oil was used
for them (although some was used making the car), so instead of using
2,000 gallons of gasoline (producing 25 lbs. of carbon dioxide per
gallon of gasoline) we used up 10,000 kWh to drive that distance, which
was paid for by our peak production (and sometimes directly charged off
the solar system). But even without the solar system, it only costs one
cent a mile to charge up off-peak.
The real point here is that we need to move in this direction. We
can’t continue to rely on oil supplies from overseas dictators. The
ancillary expenses are much too high--not to mention the human
suffering and misery.
When will our leaders figure out that we don’t need their oil and thus
have no real reason to dominate the oil producing regions, no reason to
subsidize protection of overseas oil supply lines, no reason to bomb
Iraq. All it takes is the will to produce plug-in cars capable of
driving 100 all-electric miles per day.
Most of our driving is local: 80% of our miles are driven on round-trips less than 80 miles from home.
A serial plug-in hybrid that runs just like an EV at up to 80 miles
per hour for up to 120 miles could be manufactured as easily and as
reliably as the RAV4-EV. The serial hybrid has a small (40 hp)
generator/engine that runs at constant speed to charge the battery on
occasional long trips or if you forget to plug it in. We can do this:
all it takes is the decision to allow people to join the “PV-EV” crowd,
who vow to live essentially “oil-free.”
Allowing more folks to drive all-electric cars lowers demand for
gasoline, and should lower the price of gas for everyone else. So who,
except the profit-bloated oil companies and their captive politicians,
would oppose PV-EV? We’ve got to do something; is there a better idea?
Perhaps converting ALL cars to hybrids, increasing our fleet mileage to
40 mpg (let’s say), would do the trick. But there are no hybrid
mini-vans, and many hybrids from Ford and General Motors only get 25
mpg.
The attractive thing about driving all-electric vehicles is that we
can eliminate the use of gasoline in our normal, car-oriented lifestyle
without giving anything up. No one is going to abolish gas entirely;
there will still be common tasks such as bringing supplies to the
market which require gasoline-powered vehicles.
PV-EV users are not judgmental about it; those who need to continue driving gas cars can do so.
Only a few were allowed to buy plug-in electric cars; but those
lucky drivers who experienced the PV-EV lifestyle loved it, and fought
hard to retain the EVs that made it possible. Yet powerful oil and auto
companies, their trade associations, PR firms and captive politicians
largely won and destroyed almost all plug-in electric cars. General
Motors alone confiscated and crushed over 1200 gas-free cars. Oil and
auto companies paid for campaigns to stop electric cars, and finally
sued California to force an end to electric cars and destroy almost all
of them.
Only Toyota allowed us to keep our EVs, honorably selling a plug-in
electric vehicle. If there were more plug-in EVs on the market, more
folks would be able to contemplate a move to the PV-EV way of living.
Only political leadership can force the oil and auto companies to
allow plug-in electric cars, such as a serial plug-in hybrid, on the
open market. We know the technology is viable because volunteer PV-EV
engineers modified a Prius to enable it to plug in (struggling against
the on-board computer, which seems designed to sabotage a bigger
battery pack). But like all electric cars, the plug-in Prius runs
better than a gasoline-powered car, and it gets up to 180 mpg.
The true serial hybrid would get up to 500 mpg, and could allow
drivers to generally avoid gasoline during the daily grind. Doug
Korthof, of Seal Beach, California (email doug@seal-beach.org or call
562-430-2495), says he “first learned of oil industry hatred of
electric cars at a meeting of the California Air Resources Board in
1994.” He has since attended many public meetings on clean air. He and
his family leased the Honda EV plus, then two GM EV1s, a Ford Ranger
EV, then finally were allowed by Toyota to purchase the RAV4-EV.
Retired, he holds degrees in math and philosophy and is an advocate for
local habitat values and clean oceans.
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