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EV fuel economy - movilogo

Is there any way to easily calculate how much it will cost for an EV to travel X miles?

For ICE it is easy if you know the MPG.

What is the unit for measuring economy of EVs? km per kWh?

EV fuel economy - badbusdriver

Miles or km per kWh is the EV equivalent of mpg. But that isn't going to tell you how much the journey cost, for that you need the price of the electricity too.

EV fuel economy - Adampr

Miles per kWh in the UK. Typically between 3 and 4.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

If you factor in the purchase price of the car then then quite expensive. The range can very quite a lot also so total miles over a period to how much you spend on charging for that same period will give you a better idea

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

If you factor in the purchase price of the car then then quite expensive.

Would you do that for an ICE car ? If not, why do it for an EV ?

EV fuel economy - Terry W

Cost per mile for EV:

  • at worst approximates to the cost of diesel and petrol if you charge at commercial rates away from home.
  • at best if you charge at home using solar panels the cost per mile is zero

Whether is makes economic sense depends on:

  • premium paid for an EV over ICE
  • cost of PV generation
  • mpg of ICE equivalent car

As an example assuming 12000 miles pal:

  • ICE fuel cost at (say) 40mpg = 300 gallons = ~£2100
  • EV - nothing if all charged via PV to ~£2000 using commercial chargers
  • if the premium paid for EV is (say) £5000 and the cost of PVs is also (say) £5000 to total cost of investing in EV is £10k
  • so payback is anything between 5 years (worth doing) and never!

Bear in mind that some folk go electric for reasons other than simple economics!

EV fuel economy - movilogo

As per energyguide.org.uk, average cost of 1 kWh electricity is £ 0.52

Assuming EV fuel economy 5 km/kWh then it translates to roughly 10 pence per km.

A car with 40 MPG economy translates to 14 km/L and if we assume £1.50/L fuel cost, then it translates to roughly 1.50/14 = 10 pence per km

That means if car's economy is better than 40 MPG (which many hybrids are), then ICE is better?

Edited by movilogo on 25/05/2023 at 07:44

EV fuel economy - Adampr

As per energyguide.org.uk, average cost of 1 kWh electricity is £ 0.52

Assuming EV fuel economy 5 km/kWh then it translates to roughly 10 pence per km.

A car with 40 MPG economy translates to 14 km/L and if we assume £1.50/L fuel cost, then it translates to roughly 1.50/14 = 10 pence per km

That means if car's economy is better than 40 MPG (which many hybrids are), then ICE is better?

Without bothering to check your maths, that's why demand for EVs is currently very low. However, up until March, my tariff was 5p per kWh for 4 hours a night, which was enough to top up my EV and give me running costs of 1/10 of an ICE.

Almost everyone with an EV has some kind of discounted tariff, and demand will start to rise again once energy prices drop.

Edit - just checked and current Octopus Go overnight rate is 9.5p/kwh

Edited by Adampr on 25/05/2023 at 07:57

EV fuel economy - galileo

Yesterday there was a report in the Telegraph about particulate emissions from tyres, which included a suggestion that EV tyre wear can be up to 50% more than ICE vehicles have, partly due to higher weight and possible better acceleration.

EV fuel economy - Brit_in_Germany

Only if the driver wants to use the massive initial torque of an electric motor to scrub off the rubber. The added wear is not due to the 200 kg or so of additional weight.

EV fuel economy - RT

Only if the driver wants to use the massive initial torque of an electric motor to scrub off the rubber. The added wear is not due to the 200 kg or so of additional weight.

The additional weight will inevitably cause more tyre wear - although EV-specific tyres often use harder compound but the downside of that is less grip.

EV fuel economy - Brit_in_Germany

As per energyguide.org.uk, average cost of 1 kWh electricity is £ 0.52

I suspect that price is for the public chargers. The price for a private wallbox using a night time tariff such as the Octopus one is as low as 7.5p/kWh.

EV fuel economy - Ethan Edwards

My deal with EDF is 4.5pence per kw night rate. Means my EV delivers 1.2pence per Mile. I'm hoping to get that down....my solar pv has a newly installed battery....Theoretically could get down to Nil. But tbh its unlikely.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

If you factor in the purchase price of the car then then quite expensive.

Would you do that for an ICE car ? If not, why do it for an EV ?

Did you not see the word ""IF"" in your haste to criticise my reply? What contribution have you made to the thread.

If you can afford to buy an EV then I would suggest the the first years depreciation would far exceed the cost of any electric to run the thing. Some still consider that throwing all costs in over a year to give a " cost per mile" is a better comparison based on say 10k miles average. There are still stories of EV owners driving around trying to find chargers so how much time and money wasted doing this is any ones guess.

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

<< Did you not see the word ""IF"" in your haste to criticise my reply? What contribution have you made to the thread. >>

Sammy, stop being tetchy - if you regard a simple question as 'criticism' you shouldn't start so many threads.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

<< Did you not see the word ""IF"" in your haste to criticise my reply? What contribution have you made to the thread. >>

Sammy, stop being tetchy - if you regard a simple question as 'criticism' you shouldn't start so many threads.

Well I did not start this one and yes you do have a track record of criticism to me especially. What has my number of threads have to do with it? You have mentioned this before. Stone the crows as the Aussie's say!

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

<< ... you do have a track record of criticism to me especially. What has my number of threads have to do with it? >>

Half of me says I should not bother to respond to this, but if 'track records' are being kept, I would just comment that disagreement is not necessarily 'criticism'. It sounds rather like mild paranoia to me.

EV fuel economy - alan1302

If you can afford to buy an EV then I would suggest the the first years depreciation would far exceed the cost of any electric to run the thing.

I expect many ICE vehicles are like that as well.

EV fuel economy - mcb100
‘What is the unit for measuring economy of EVs? km per kW?’

You may also find kWh/100 miles (or km), the same format as the European measurement of litres/100km.
EV fuel economy - pd

Teslas always seem to show watts per mile as the consumption but most UK market cars from others use Miles per kWh.

Usually somewhere in the 3-5 range.

Either way with that info it is no harder to work out your consumption and costs than with a ICE.

Edited by pd on 25/05/2023 at 09:45

EV fuel economy - movilogo

Are newer EVs going to get more km (or mile) per kWh or that is limited by laws of physics?

When we say battery technology will improve in future, what do we exactly mean?

  1. More distance travelled per kWh (but that depends on weight of car etc)?
  2. More kWh condensed to lower weight (i.e. more energy density or less battery weight for same capacity)
  3. Faster charging (quicker to charge same kWh)
  4. All of above
  5. Something else?

Edited by movilogo on 25/05/2023 at 10:24

EV fuel economy - sammy1

The excellent advice given just recently on this forum was to skip over the bits you are not interested in so to you and some others when you see me pop up give us a miss. It will save a lot of possible agro and give the mods a rest. I have noticed the forum has been very good of late so why upset the apple cart?

Edited by Xileno on 26/05/2023 at 04:52

EV fuel economy - FP

"The excellent advice given just recently on this forum was to skip over the bits you are not interested in so to you and some others when you see me pop up give us a miss. It will save a lot of possible agro and give the mods a rest. I have noticed the forum has been very good of late so why upset the apple cart?"

It seems you're suggesting that, even though people may be interested in the topic, you want your posts to be ignored by anyone who wants to question them or offer a different opinion.

That doesn't sound like what should happen in a discussion forum.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"The excellent advice given just recently on this forum was to skip over the bits you are not interested in so to you and some others when you see me pop up give us a miss. It will save a lot of possible agro and give the mods a rest. I have noticed the forum has been very good of late so why upset the apple cart?"

It seems you're suggesting that, even though people may be interested in the topic, you want your posts to be ignored by anyone who wants to question them or offer a different opinion.

That doesn't sound like what should happen in a discussion forum.

Thank you for repeating the advice in the first paragraph. Repeated again here. I am sure others will use their own good judgement

EV fuel economy - mcb100
‘That means if car's economy is better than 40 MPG (which many hybrids are), then ICE is better?‘

Depends on your definition of ‘better’.

If you’re looking at just the pence per mile fuel costs of ICE vs an EV using exclusively public chargers, then an efficient ICE may be cheaper per mile.
But factor in that most charging takes place at home at a much lower cost per kW/h and EV pulls ahead.

Also add in (currently) no RFL, lower servicing costs due to a much reduced renewable items count (including lower tyre wear, despite what the Telegraph says) and you get a different result.

Not forgetting the obvious reason EV is ‘better’, and the reason that we’re transitioning to battery technology, zero tailpipe emissions and a massively lower whole life carbon footprint.

Edited by mcb100 on 25/05/2023 at 11:03

EV fuel economy - RT
‘That means if car's economy is better than 40 MPG (which many hybrids are), then ICE is better?‘ Depends on your definition of ‘better’. If you’re looking at just the pence per mile fuel costs of ICE vs an EV using exclusively public chargers, then an efficient ICE may be cheaper per mile. But factor in that most charging takes place at home at a much lower cost per kW/h and EV pulls ahead. Also add in (currently) no RFL, lower servicing costs due to a much reduced renewable items count (including lower tyre wear, despite what the Telegraph says) and you get a different result. Not forgetting the obvious reason EV is ‘better’, and the reason that we’re transitioning to battery technology, zero tailpipe emissions and a massively lower whole life carbon footprint.

"massively lower whole life carbon footprint" is simply not true at present - the whole life carbon footprint of EVs is comparable with IC cars of similar size and specification.

EVs are much cleaner at point of use, that's why the politicians are promoting them.

EV fuel economy - mcb100
Find me some scientific, peer reviewed data that backs up your statement for a UK mix of energy production. I’ll wait.

If we were in Poland, with massively greater dependence on coal, I’d agree with you.
EV fuel economy - RT
Find me some scientific, peer reviewed data that backs up your statement for a UK mix of energy production. I’ll wait. If we were in Poland, with massively greater dependence on coal, I’d agree with you.

Have you not noticed that most EVs sold in the UK are built outside the UK - so the UK energy mix is only applicable to part of their whole life carbon footprint.

EV fuel economy - mcb100
Yes, I work for, amongst others, Polestar who build the Polestar 2 in China.

In the only car factory in the country powered 100% from renewables. That, granted, is partly offset by shipping to Europe, but in a vessel carrying anything up to 8500 cars at a time. This carbon emissions per unit are tiny.

EV fuel economy - sammy1
‘That means if car's economy is better than 40 MPG (which many hybrids are), then ICE is better?‘ Depends on your definition of ‘better’. If you’re looking at just the pence per mile fuel costs of ICE vs an EV using exclusively public chargers, then an efficient ICE may be cheaper per mile. But factor in that most charging takes place at home at a much lower cost per kW/h and EV pulls ahead. Also add in (currently) no RFL, lower servicing costs due to a much reduced renewable items count (including lower tyre wear, despite what the Telegraph says) and you get a different result. Not forgetting the obvious reason EV is ‘better’, and the reason that we’re transitioning to battery technology, zero tailpipe emissions and a massively lower whole life carbon footprint.

"massively lower whole life carbon footprint" is simply not true at present - the whole life carbon footprint of EVs is comparable with IC cars of similar size and specification.

EVs are much cleaner at point of use, that's why the politicians are promoting them.

With the UK generating electric from 60% gas still and although a small percentage Drax no longer considered green then emissions are at the power stations and not from your EVs but for this reason alone the carbon to move them is still substantial. Apparently the carbon just to produce an EV is greater than an ICE so cannot be ignored. For the UK to get so called carbon neutral is going to be easier than other countries with a much higher percentage of manufacturing.

Some EV battery manufacturers have already made great strides in the weight and range of Batteries so greater economy will follow.

At the moment I cannot see many buyers of EVs having too many concerns about miles per Kwh or any other way you slice it. Rapid charging must be the goal of most even if it might cost a bit more.

EV fuel economy - Brit_in_Germany

Don't know where the 60% figure was plucked from. The true figure is close to 35%.

EV fuel economy - SLO76
So far, it’s cost nothing for my wife to commute in her Nissan Leaf because we use the local free chargers instead of plugging it in at home. I know this is only a short-term bonus, but we’ll take the free fuel while it’s going. Prices have dropped of late and our 3yr old Leaf at £13,600 isn’t really much dearer than an equivalent petrol or hybrid hatchback, but we have no fuel costs in normal use. On longer journeys we’ll no doubt have to shell out.
EV fuel economy - sammy1
So far, it’s cost nothing for my wife to commute in her Nissan Leaf because we use the local free chargers instead of plugging it in at home. I know this is only a short-term bonus, but we’ll take the free fuel while it’s going. Prices have dropped of late and our 3yr old Leaf at £13,600 isn’t really much dearer than an equivalent petrol or hybrid hatchback, but we have no fuel costs in normal use. On longer journeys we’ll no doubt have to shell out.

Yes if you can charge from home or nearby free charge, only drive reasonably local then EV is a sound solution provided you ditch it before the battery dies.

EV fuel economy - Terry W
Yes if you can charge from home or nearby free charge, only drive reasonably local then EV is a sound solution provided you ditch it before the battery dies.

Makes about as much sense (not very much) as asserting the ICE (engine, gearbox, clutch) fail and need rebuilding or replacement by the time they hit 150k.

The average car is scrapped when it is ~14 years old. Based upon average miles driven it will have covered around 150k miles. Some do go on for longer, some fare less well due to accidents and poor maintenance.

Tesla claim their batteries will lose ~1% of capacity pa. When the rest of the car is toast, the batteries can be repurposed as domestic storage when range and capacity is less of an issue.

Try doing that with a diesel!!!

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

<< When the rest of the car is toast, the batteries can be repurposed as domestic storage when range and capacity is less of an issue. >>

I know that is often said, but how much thought has been given to the detail of actually incorporating a tired car battery into a domestic system ?

EV fuel economy - Adampr

<< When the rest of the car is toast, the batteries can be repurposed as domestic storage when range and capacity is less of an issue. >>

I know that is often said, but how much thought has been given to the detail of actually incorporating a tired car battery into a domestic system ?

A lot, I suppose. It's not an idea, it's what happens.

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

<< When the rest of the car is toast, the batteries can be repurposed as domestic storage when range and capacity is less of an issue. >>

I know that is often said, but how much thought has been given to the detail of actually incorporating a tired car battery into a domestic system ?

A lot, I suppose. It's not an idea, it's what happens.

Does it ? Where ? How much ?

EV fuel economy - sammy1

<< When the rest of the car is toast, the batteries can be repurposed as domestic storage when range and capacity is less of an issue. >>

I know that is often said, but how much thought has been given to the detail of actually incorporating a tired car battery into a domestic system ?

How true try lugging a 1000 pound car battery up the stairs or an ugly thing sat in the garden how on earth could you move it in a domestic environment besides it being toxic and dangerous Suspect the battery will be "toast" long before the rest of the car Solar panel systems for instance have their own batteries professionally installed to do a purpose

EV fuel economy - sammy1
Yes if you can charge from home or nearby free charge, only drive reasonably local then EV is a sound solution provided you ditch it before the battery dies.

Makes about as much sense (not very much) as asserting the ICE (engine, gearbox, clutch) fail and need rebuilding or replacement by the time they hit 150k.

The average car is scrapped when it is ~14 years old. Based upon average miles driven it will have covered around 150k miles. Some do go on for longer, some fare less well due to accidents and poor maintenance.

Tesla claim their batteries will lose ~1% of capacity pa. When the rest of the car is toast, the batteries can be repurposed as domestic storage when range and capacity is less of an issue.

Try doing that with a diesel!!!

We are talking EVs here. EV batteries are still a relatively unknown regardless of what the makers might assure customers. One of the first EVs the Leaf is already known to loose considerable range as it ages. OK batteries have moved on but true life usage as hardly started so who really knows yet

EV fuel economy - edlithgow
“Try doing that with a diesel”

Ive seen a combined domestic heat and power system many years ago based, IIRC, on a FIAT Panda (Mk1) FIRE engine running on LPG so it would certainly be a theoretical possibility, though not carbon neutral and not trivial either of course, but then nether would hooking up a tired EV battery

Edited by edlithgow on 09/06/2023 at 07:44

EV fuel economy - JonestHon

Not including everthing involved in running a car of any propulsion is not a true representation of cost.

Fitting a wall box has cost, solar panels has cost, depreciated asset, visiting the forecourt has implications for my wallet beside buying fuel with 50% tax, and so it goes , I am not sure there is a way to count all this up.

EV fuel economy - pd

Early LEAFs do degrade but they're not "toast".

There are still 2012 examples with 150k+ on the clock running about being useful to someone and still worth £3k.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

Early LEAFs do degrade but they're not "toast".

There are still 2012 examples with 150k+ on the clock running about being useful to someone and still worth £3k.

Yes and some with a range of about 40miles

EV fuel economy - pd

Early LEAFs do degrade but they're not "toast".

There are still 2012 examples with 150k+ on the clock running about being useful to someone and still worth £3k.

Yes and some with a range of about 40miles

Well they only had 60-80 to start with; And a range of 40 miles is useful to some people. The point is they are not dead or scrapped and still have monetary worth.

Edited by pd on 25/05/2023 at 21:06

EV fuel economy - sammy1

Early LEAFs do degrade but they're not "toast".

There are still 2012 examples with 150k+ on the clock running about being useful to someone and still worth £3k.

Yes and some with a range of about 40miles

Well they only had 60-80 to start with; And a range of 40 miles is useful to some people. The point is they are not dead or scrapped and still have monetary worth.

Not worth £3k though surely when there are thousands of cars to chose from

EV fuel economy - Xileno

Couple of edits made. Yes it is a discussion forum and people should feel free to challenge what someone has written and being challenged is not necessarily criticism. The other side of the coin is it should be done in a respectful way, in order to keep the forum as friendly as possible.

Thanks

EV fuel economy - pd

Early LEAFs do degrade but they're not "toast".

There are still 2012 examples with 150k+ on the clock running about being useful to someone and still worth £3k.

Yes and some with a range of about 40miles

Well they only had 60-80 to start with; And a range of 40 miles is useful to some people. The point is they are not dead or scrapped and still have monetary worth.

Not worth £3k though surely when there are thousands of cars to chose from

Well, clearly they are worth £3k as that's what a reasonable one sells for.

What they aren't is scrap or worthless. If you've got the space to park it I can certainly see the usefulness of an old leaf as a third car or whatever.

EV fuel economy - gordonbennet

Not including everthing involved in running a car of any propulsion is not a true representation of cost.

Fitting a wall box has cost, solar panels has cost, depreciated asset, visiting the forecourt has implications for my wallet beside buying fuel with 50% tax, and so it goes , I am not sure there is a way to count all this up.

And that is the crux of this matter, what is going to be the real cost of operating a battery car once enough ICE cars have been taxed banned or penalised off the roads, they'll come for the battery cars without doubt. My own gut feeling is that battery cars are not intended to be a new propulsion of transport for the masses, private transport i suggest will increasingly become a perk for the wealthy only, you only have to look at the ever increasing costs of not just buying your own transport and the taxation burden on top, be it VED or other taxes. Don't blame anyone who's managed to take advantage of the honeymoon period to have cheap transport, but like everything that time is coming to an end.
EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

<< My own gut feeling is that battery cars are not intended to be a new propulsion of transport for the masses, private transport i suggest will increasingly become a perk for the wealthy only, >>

That was the way it was, getting on for 100 years ago. If the masses travelled, they used Shanks' pony, a bike or a bus locally, and splashed out occasionally on a train journey. As a consequence most towns have streets of terrace houses with nowhere to keep a car. Getting back to that way of life would be a wrench for many, but not impossible - and it could just help the planet ...

EV fuel economy - Bolt

My own gut feeling is that battery cars are not intended to be a new propulsion of transport for the masses

The jap car companies appear to think the same as they are all joining up to develop hydrogen, ICE and fuel cell, that includes Subaru who I wouldn`t have expected to join but they too think all electric is asking too much and doesn`t give the customer a choice in the matter, in there opinion not mine.

EV fuel economy - skidpan

My own gut feeling is that battery cars are not intended to be a new propulsion of transport for the masses

The jap car companies appear to think the same as they are all joining up to develop hydrogen, ICE and fuel cell, that includes Subaru who I wouldn`t have expected to join but they too think all electric is asking too much and doesn`t give the customer a choice in the matter, in there opinion not mine.

Dream on if you think any alternative other than electric has any chance. I am not going to repeat most of what is obvious to anyone other than electric haters but I will say is it not obvious that whilst electric cars have progressed and the charging network developed the H2 alternative has stood still at 14 sites and the number of cars on the market remains at 2.

EV fuel economy - movilogo

battery cars are not intended to be a new propulsion of transport for the masses

until their prices come down to an affordable level and convenience of charging becomes at par with filling up ICE cars

Completed the sentence for you :-)

EV fuel economy - pd

battery cars are not intended to be a new propulsion of transport for the masses

until their prices come down to an affordable level and convenience of charging becomes at par with filling up ICE cars

Completed the sentence for you :-)

Are they they unaffordable? The market will decide like everything else, particularly on the used market.

EV fuel economy - gordonbennet
The former Great Britain isn't the only country in the world, we're overpopulated small islands off the coast of Europe which has to import everything useful, similarly population wise the western nations signed up to economic self ruin are but a minor customer base when compared to the rapidly expanding rest of world.

I doubt the Japanese give modern Britain a second thought re car sales, the only thing going for us is like some other countries we drive on the same side of the road as Japan so economies of volume play a role, other countries that get decent weather may well be better placed to include Hydrogen as a viable power source.

Because we haven't started clapping like performing seals about to be awarded a fish over the possibility of a rechargeable battery car doesn't mean we are electric haters, some of us just really can't see what all the fuss is about and have a lifetime's experience of seeing politician's schemes, we're old enough that we won't be forced into having one.

Edited by gordonbennet on 26/05/2023 at 11:25

EV fuel economy - Bolt

My own gut feeling is that battery cars are not intended to be a new propulsion of transport for the masses

The jap car companies appear to think the same as they are all joining up to develop hydrogen, ICE and fuel cell, that includes Subaru who I wouldn`t have expected to join but they too think all electric is asking too much and doesn`t give the customer a choice in the matter, in there opinion not mine.

Dream on if you think any alternative other than electric has any chance. I am not going to repeat most of what is obvious to anyone other than electric haters but I will say is it not obvious that whilst electric cars have progressed and the charging network developed the H2 alternative has stood still at 14 sites and the number of cars on the market remains at 2.

Lets just agree to disagree, I hear this all the time, partly why I rarely mention it now as anyone mentions anything negative about EVs and they are called haters.

but I do believe we should have a choice not be dictated to as to what cars we drive so many companies are starting to use Hydrogen whether you like it or not, just because you don`t hear about it doesn`t mean it isn`t happening

Nothing is obvious in this world as things change all the time like choices, just because a few are going EVs doesn't mean everyone will follow...

EV fuel economy - RT

My own gut feeling is that battery cars are not intended to be a new propulsion of transport for the masses

The jap car companies appear to think the same as they are all joining up to develop hydrogen, ICE and fuel cell, that includes Subaru who I wouldn`t have expected to join but they too think all electric is asking too much and doesn`t give the customer a choice in the matter, in there opinion not mine.

Dream on if you think any alternative other than electric has any chance. I am not going to repeat most of what is obvious to anyone other than electric haters but I will say is it not obvious that whilst electric cars have progressed and the charging network developed the H2 alternative has stood still at 14 sites and the number of cars on the market remains at 2.

Hydrogen power has it's place - but not for private cars - construction vehicles is a good potential market.

EV fuel economy - pd

I agree. I can't see any point or advantage for hydrogen for private passenger cars. Maybe other forms of road transport.

Not sure we are losing much choice. For nigh on 100 years we only really had petrol and latterly diesel. No one moaned much.

I'm not convinced only a few are only EV either. Even the Japanese are hedging their bets otherwise it is pretty much the entire industry. Development of new ICE vehicles is already over by most of them. Whether good or bad it is simply a fact.

Edited by pd on 26/05/2023 at 14:53

EV fuel economy - sammy1

I agree. I can't see any point or advantage for hydrogen for private passenger cars. Maybe other forms of road transport.

Not sure we are losing much choice. For nigh on 100 years we only really had petrol and latterly diesel. No one moaned much.

I'm not convinced only a few are only EV either. Even the Japanese are hedging their bets otherwise it is pretty much the entire industry. Development of new ICE vehicles is already over by most of them. Whether good or bad it is simply a fact.

The fact that EVs are still slower to refuel and have limited range is very much a factor in peoples reasoning to buy one as is the price. The charging network is very much under developed and when the GOV says we aim to have 6 rapid chargers in every motorway service station is a bit of a joke EVs may still turn out to be a flash in the pan even looking 10 years ahead. James May is the only person that I have seen filling a car with hydrogen. He filed it as quick as with petrol from a pump and I think the H was delivered in lbs Hydrogen is miles behind but could still come good EVs seem to be foisted on the public too quickly a bit like the rest of the carbon free policies heat pumps being one

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

<< James May is the only person that I have seen filling a car with hydrogen. He filled it as quick as with petrol from a pump and I think the H was delivered in lbs >>

Hydrogen can only be delivered as a high-pressure gas unless it is liquefied at extremely low temperature, which is not practical (or safe) at roadside filling stations. As it is so light (low density) 'a few lbs' (whatever that means when it is much lighter than air) take up a lot of space, which means a large tank capable of containing (very) high pressure, thus adding a fair bit of weight. So not really practical for small vehicles.

Those considerations, plus its high flammability, will probably confine hydrogen to specialist power units.

EV fuel economy - movilogo

The fact that EVs are still slower to refuel and have limited range is very much a factor in peoples reasoning to buy one as is the price.

Indeed. The barriers to EV are:

  1. High procurement cost (similarly priced ICE cars offer more features)
  2. Range (granted it is improving and I don't think it is a major issue anymore)
  3. Filling up/charging time (still a major issue)
  4. Resale value (newer cars will have better batteries)

As already discussed in this thread, unless you get free or very cheap electricity the running cost of EV is similar to that of a fuel efficient ICE car.

EV fuel economy - Brit_in_Germany

You mean if you sign up to the tariffs on offer?

EV fuel economy - Bolt

The fact that EVs are still slower to refuel and have limited range is very much a factor in peoples reasoning to buy one as is the price.

I have doubts the price of an EV will go down due to costs involved with the batteries, ie, r&d costs, though development is going well on a solid state battery which can charge to 90% in 9 minutes, problem is the production of the battery is slow and very little hope at the moment of speeding it up, speeding it up ruins the materials in the battery at the moment but once tech improves it should speed up, but could take years

Toyota are putting this solid state into hybrids to test them out so will be interesting to see how this new tech plays out :)

EV fuel economy - Terry W

Toyota - they sell 10m cars a year worldwide. Assuming £20k per vehicle this is £200bn sales - as a company they have the same income as a medium sized country.

Spending a few million on research to hedge their bets makes good business sense - even though I rate the probability of hydrogen as a fuel for cars at very low.

It is evident from new car launches over the past two years that motor manufacturers are putting most of their efforts into EVs. ICE development has largely stalled.

The costs of ownership of personal transport (EV or ICE) depend on taxation policies which can change. Currently government are concerned to find a way to tax EVs to recover lost fuel duties but avoid making them uncompetitive. Post 2030 - who knows?

A very swift lease comparison of petrol vs EV mid size hatch (10k pa, 6 month advance payment, 48 months) shows EV at around £100 per month more - two tanks of fuel. This could make good sense for many depending on how the EV is charged.

That some don't like the changes coming is a matter of opinion - but that it will happen is pretty much a certainty like it or not.

Edited by Terry W on 26/05/2023 at 16:50

EV fuel economy - pd

By the time hydrogen becomes remotely practical EVs will be cheaper to make than current ICE and probably have any sensible range you want.

There are billions and billions being pumped into EVs.

It's a time of change and will have transition issues but the potential for EV of huge leap forwards compared to ICE which has been developed to the point it's so complicated it's not even cheap any more.

It'll be a bit bumpy but it's actually quite an exciting time if you're interested in cars.

EV fuel economy - Adampr

Toyota - they sell 10m cars a year worldwide. Assuming £20k per vehicle this is £200bn sales - as a company they have the same income as a medium sized country.

Spending a few million on research to hedge their bets makes good business sense - even though I rate the probability of hydrogen as a fuel for cars at very low.

It is evident from new car launches over the past two years that motor manufacturers are putting most of their efforts into EVs. ICE development has largely stalled.

The costs of ownership of personal transport (EV or ICE) depend on taxation policies which can change. Currently government are concerned to find a way to tax EVs to recover lost fuel duties but avoid making them uncompetitive. Post 2030 - who knows?

A very swift lease comparison of petrol vs EV mid size hatch (10k pa, 6 month advance payment, 48 months) shows EV at around £100 per month more - two tanks of fuel. This could make good sense for many depending on how the EV is charged.

That some don't like the changes coming is a matter of opinion - but that it will happen is pretty much a certainty like it or not.

When I had my Corsa, it was leased on salary sacrifice, so I didn't pay income tax on the lease cost. I did have to pay BIK, but it was much lower than for a petrol car.

EV fuel economy - movilogo

Mr Bean's view on EV

www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/jun/03/elec...n

EV fuel economy - Brit_in_Germany

How are the opinions of someone who has owned (and crashed) cars such as a Mclaren F1 and a Jaguar XJ220 relevant?

EV fuel economy - sammy1

I read RAs review also and can relate to everything he says and if most were honest would agree with it. It is sound technology but being imposed too rapidly. RA is a respected car aficionado even if he probably has more money than sense. His views on hanging onto old cars make sense and also the making of an EV is not as green as it might first appear

EV fuel economy - alan1302

How are the opinions of someone who has owned (and crashed) cars such as a Mclaren F1 and a Jaguar XJ220 relevant?

Have a read of the artlce - some interesting points. Just because someone has some expensive cars not mean that their opinions are not relevent.

Would you think your views on the UK are not relevent because you are not here?

EV fuel economy - John F

How are the opinions of someone who has owned (and crashed) cars such as a Mclaren F1 and a Jaguar XJ220 relevant?

I think his credentials of high intelligence, an M Sc in electrical engineering and extensive automotive interest and experience probably add more weight to his opinions than many of those on this thread.

EV fuel economy - FP

Rowan Atkinson's article has been critiqued and found wanting in a follow-up in The Guardian: www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jun/08/fact-c...s

In particular, he is accused of relying on factual inaccuracies and research that has now been debunked.

The article's author is Simon Evans, the deputy editor and senior policy editor at Carbon Brief, an organisation funded by the European Climate Foundation, an independent philanthropic initiative. Some may say that, although CB has won awards for investigative journalism, it and the ECF have an agenda.

EV fuel economy - Bolt

Hydrogen power has it's place - but not for private cars

Could be why Hyundai is now making Hydrogen cars and doing a lot of R&D into making the fuel more compact in a car, without what the other JAP companies are doing, but don`t take my word for it just look around so its not just contributors making the EV look unrosy its the makers as well

EV fuel economy - Bolt

Dream on if you think any alternative other than electric has any chance.

I only see what some companies are actually doing, if you think it won`t happen too many are getting involved and are of the opinion that EVs are too expensive to gain them traction due to costs, the price of EVs will not be going down anytime soon as there is too much cost in battery R&D/electronic development for most to pay for

Don`t forget Tesla started out all EV so they already have the layout which makes them better than anyone and improving all the time, I doubt anyone else will catch them imo.

Both Toyota and Hyundai have both said they will pay with help to build Hydrogen charging stations and I gather they have already made cars for it both ice and fc

It doesn`t bother me what happens, though I won`t be buying an EV anytime soon even if they did come down in price, which has probably less chance than seeing hfc car around, as imo too many drawbacks to having one.

EV fuel economy - mcb100
An interesting article, had it been produced five years ago. Some of the data (notably the Volvo study) is seriously out of date.
EV fuel economy - corax

They are all things that have been discussed before on this forum at length, with all the pros and cons.

No criticism of Rowan Atkinson - he is writing to the average punter (non motoring) who may not have heard of all the alternatives being tested.

EV fuel economy - mcb100
Just as an illustration of economy, I’m currently sitting at a rapid charger in Sunderland (no queue…) charging a Genesis EG80.
I’ve cruised up from Doncaster at a steady 73mph on cruise control, climate set to 19 degrees. Considering that this is a large, luxury saloon (all £84,500 of it) it’s done 3.3 miles per kWh, meaning a 250 miles range at that speed.
EV fuel economy - mcb100
And 3.5 on the way back (270 mile range) on the way back, presumably because it’s downhill from Wearside to South Yorkshire….
EV fuel economy - davecooper

The biggest problem for me with EV's is winter range. One of the prereqs for me buying av EV is that I wouldn't have stop on a journey more than I have to with my current ICE car. My family is spread all over country and the nearest is a 200 mile round trip plus a few miles running round when we are there, and the journey is probably 98% motorway. I would never even think about stopping on the way there or on the way back normally, which is usually late at night. So will an EV allow me to do that journey, without a stop, in the middle of winter with the lights, heater and wipers all going and a sub zero outside temperature? That is not an unusual journey. If I can do that comfortably without a stop then I may start to consider an EV.

Edited by davecooper on 04/06/2023 at 19:17

EV fuel economy - Adampr

Yes, but won't be cheap. Anything on this list over about 270 miles should do you a 200.kile trip in the depths of winter.

ev-database.org/uk/cheatsheet/range-electric-car

EV fuel economy - davecooper

Exactly. Range comes at a price and its not one I am prepared to pay.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""Just as an illustration of economy, I’m currently sitting at a rapid charger in Sunderland (no queue…) charging a Genesis EG80.

I’ve cruised up from Doncaster at a steady 73mph on cruise control, climate set to 19 degrees. Considering that this is a large, luxury saloon (all £84,500 of it) it’s done 3.3 miles per kWh, meaning a 250 miles range at that speed."""

By my calculations you would use approx 140 Kwh of electric which at 80p per Kwh is £112 for the journey. I am using 80p as Shell and BP charge between 79p and 85p

A 5 series petrol BMW 3 litre would average 35mpg so over 500 miles would use 14gallons of petrol @ £1.40 per litre is approx £89 for the journey..

@ 60p per Kwh the costs are similar. You might charge at home for the outward journey but a company driver probably would not bother.

So for two similar cars there is NO saving on fuel costs in my opinion. The new 2 litre petrol 5 series would average 50mpg and cost some £25k less to buy

EV fuel economy - Terry W

As always, the answer depends on pre-conceptions and assumptions made.

Google maps shows the distance from Doncaster to Sunderland as 108 miles. Even a return journey would be achievable on a single charge.

I assume you are basing the calculation over 500 miles - a possible reasonable range for the BMW. Using a premium charging cost of 80p per Kwh and 3.3m per Kwh gives a cost of 24p per mile. The cost of fossil fuels at £6.30 gal and 35mpg is 18p a mile.

Rerun the numbers using zero cost electricity based on all local (with return range) travel and charging by PV at home - running cost is zero. Using overnight cheap rates cost may be a few pence. Even at full rate from July is 30p Kwh - 9p per mile.

Whether it is worth the price premium to get the running cost savings depends entirely on personal usage. Doing the calculation based on premium motors is somewhat questionable - most folk in the market for a change would probably look at small and mid-size cars.

EV fuel economy - movilogo

I’m currently sitting at a rapid charger

With ICE, there is no need to sit on fuel stations. Top up in 5 mins and off you go. :o)

While we are calculating fuel/electricity cost, don't forget the "time".

Time is money and waiting at charging point has some opportunity cost which should be factored in cost calculation.

EV fuel economy - FP

"... 80p per Kwh... I am using 80p as Shell and BP charge between 79p and 85p"

My supplier, Octopus, has a tariff for EVs as follows:

Night rate (00:30 - 04:30): 9.5p / kWh

Day rate (04:30 - 00:30): 41.65p / kWh

Standing charge: 42.01p / day

So even the most expensive rate from Octopus is far less than 80p/kWh. Their cheapest rate is well below even that. Assuming you can start out with a full charge you would not be forced to pay high rates at a public charge point - if your EV has a reasonable range, and obviously a lot depends on that.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"... 80p per Kwh... I am using 80p as Shell and BP charge between 79p and 85p"

My supplier, Octopus, has a tariff for EVs as follows:

Night rate (00:30 - 04:30): 9.5p / kWh

Day rate (04:30 - 00:30): 41.65p / kWh

Standing charge: 42.01p / day

So even the most expensive rate from Octopus is far less than 80p/kWh. Their cheapest rate is well below even that. Assuming you can start out with a full charge you would not be forced to pay high rates at a public charge point - if your EV has a reasonable range, and obviously a lot depends on that.

mcb100 is talking company car and I did mention the possibility of may be charging from home on the outward leg of a journey. I used 500 miles as an example as the OP post suggests range of 250 and 273 miles.

They are good rates from Octopus but if you are away from home you have to pay the public charger rates and these can vary but looking around for the cheapest is perhaps not practical.

As a matter of interest is the standing charge additional to your domestic S/C some £153 a year?

EV fuel economy - Adampr

There are two types of company car driver; those who get reimbursed all expenses and the majority who are paid a fixed mileage rate.Those in the second category will charge at home so that they make a 'profit' on their mileage allowance.

Those that are reimbursed the full cost (or more likely pay it on a company credit card in the first place) don't care and might as well use rapid chargers.

As for cost of 'ownership', company cars are leased. For your ICE BMWs, you'll be paying BIK of about 30%. For an EV, it's 2%.

EV fuel economy - Adampr

Exactly. Range comes at a price and its not one I am prepared to pay.

The considering didn't take long!

EV fuel economy - mcb100
‘ Google maps shows the distance from Doncaster to Sunderland as 108 miles. Even a return journey would be achievable on a single charge.’

Exactly this. It was on c80% when I collected it, and I could probably have done it. I have to show it to customers with a healthy dose of charge, so whilst I had a burger and McFlurry it charged at 100kW.
EV fuel economy - badbusdriver

One of the prereqs for me buying av EV is that I wouldn't have stop on a journey more than I have to with my current ICE car. My family is spread all over country and the nearest is a 200 mile round trip

Well bully for you that your bladder can deal with 200+ miles without a stop, mine couldn't!

BTW, the Hyundai Ionic 5 can be charged from 10-80% in as little as 18 minutes on an ultra fast charger.

EV fuel economy - RT

One of the prereqs for me buying av EV is that I wouldn't have stop on a journey more than I have to with my current ICE car. My family is spread all over country and the nearest is a 200 mile round trip

Well bully for you that your bladder can deal with 200+ miles without a stop, mine couldn't!

BTW, the Hyundai Ionic 5 can be charged from 10-80% in as little as 18 minutes on an ultra fast charger.

Charging an EV in the short time it takes for a comfort break is barely practical - it could be done over a meal time but huge numbers of drivers are averse to paying motorway services prices for a meal.

EV fuel economy - davecooper

One of the prereqs for me buying av EV is that I wouldn't have stop on a journey more than I have to with my current ICE car. My family is spread all over country and the nearest is a 200 mile round trip

Well bully for you that your bladder can deal with 200+ miles without a stop, mine couldn't!

BTW, the Hyundai Ionic 5 can be charged from 10-80% in as little as 18 minutes on an ultra fast charger.

What! I said a 200 mile round trip, 100 miles each way. It tales an hour and a half on a good day. I alway stop after two hours or so for a coffee and a leg stretch. My bladder couldn't go 200 miles either.

EV fuel economy - sammy1
‘ Google maps shows the distance from Doncaster to Sunderland as 108 miles. Even a return journey would be achievable on a single charge.’ Exactly this. It was on c80% when I collected it, and I could probably have done it. I have to show it to customers with a healthy dose of charge, so whilst I had a burger and McFlurry it charged at 100kW.

As you were giving miles per kwh I thought I would convert them to hard cash as a comparison. The new BMW 520 petrol could do the 500 miles without re-fuelling and have plenty to spare .Your Genesis would need to charge twice. In the press today the petrol Golf 1.5 costs 13.03p per mile the equivalent VW ID3 costs 21.43p at Todays fuel prices and using public chargers. Public charger prices have doubled from May 2022. Yes home chargers cost far less but everything in the EV world is not as rosy as some like to make out.

EV fuel economy - FP

"... everything in the EV world is not as rosy as some like to make out."

There are always going to be disagreements over this sort of issue, but there are some who post here who seem to seize every opportunity to make things for EVs look as un-rosy as possible.

I say we need to be pragmatic and deal with things as they are, not as we might like them to be.

EV fuel economy - Adampr

I've found the article comparing costs per mile. It also includes this gem:

"The vast weight of electric vehicles may also cause more potholes, according to the road-building association the Asphalt Industry Alliance. Due to their large batteries, electric vehicles are usually more than twice as heavy as average cars."

Journalism at its finest!

EV fuel economy - John F

I've found the article comparing costs per mile. It also includes this gem:

"The vast weight of electric vehicles may also cause more potholes....... Due to their large batteries, electric vehicles are usually more than twice as heavy as average cars."

Journalism at its finest!

Although there is some truth in the inescapable fact that carting hundreds of kilos of battery around causes wear and requires energy, most mundane 'average' ICE cars weigh somewhere between 1100 and 1500 kilos. I can't think of any comparable EVs over 2200 kilos, although a long range Polestar seems to be particularly heavy.

EV fuel economy - mcb100
‘ As you were giving miles per kwh I thought I would convert them to hard cash as a comparison. The new BMW 520 petrol could do the 500 miles without re-fuelling and have plenty to spare .Your Genesis would need to charge twice. In the press today the petrol Golf 1.5 costs 13.03p per mile the equivalent VW ID3 costs 21.43p at Todays fuel prices and using public chargers. Public charger prices have doubled from May 2022. Yes home chargers cost far less but everything in the EV world is not as rosy as some like to make out.’

If we both start with a ‘full tank’, I’d have charged once en route to make 500 miles.
EV fuel economy - movilogo

Why no one in catering for lower end of EV market?

I shall be happy with an EV with just 50 miles range provided it is very cheap to buy (circa £5k new).

Many people drive short distances 80-90% of the time. So as a 2nd car, a dirt cheap EV is ideal. While aiming for longer ranges, manufacturers are ignoring this market.

Pollution is mostly in towns. So if people are encouraged to buy cheap EVs for local commute we have lower pollution and people can use ICEs for longer journeys. This is a win-win solution.

Hence we need cheaper EVs, not expensive EVs with longer ranges. Citroen Ami is nearest example for this category. Still nearly 8 grand though.

EV fuel economy - Xileno

The Chinese will be dominant in the lower end of the market. Whether we should be buying more of their products is a separate debate. In the meantime, does it have to be new? Early Leafs and Zoes must be in this price bracket by now.

EV fuel economy - Bolt

The Chinese will be dominant in the lower end of the market. Whether we should be buying more of their products is a separate debate. In the meantime, does it have to be new? Early Leafs and Zoes must be in this price bracket by now.

Assuming the Chinese can make a profit, I read a lot are going bust because they cannot compete, also I believe the Leaf is being discontinued as they are not making a large enough profit

EV fuel economy - movilogo

Early Leafs and Zoes must be in this price bracket by now.

Yes, but I think Ami can be driven with moped license or someone not with full driving license? In France one doesn't need any license to drive Ami!

EV fuel economy - Bolt

Pollution is mostly in towns.

Of the councils own doing, when they close off sideroads and make everyone use main roads (why we get severe traffic jams) you expect pollution to go up, ie, its done on purpose.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""If we both start with a ‘full tank’, I’d have charged once en route to make 500 miles.

Yes bit you would still have nothing left after 500 miles and possible range anxiety .So you have to waste another 30 minutes charging to go anywhere The BMW if it only had a 14 gallon tank would have 200 miles left

EV fuel economy - mcb100
‘ Yes, but I think Ami can be driven with moped license or someone not with full driving license? In France one doesn't need any license to drive Ami!’

Full UK licence required, and it’s limited to 28mph, though they can be mapped to exceed this.
EV fuel economy - movilogo

I thought Ami can be driven with category AM license as well. Which means moped license so someone with CBT and L plate legally allowed to drive? Or that's not the case?

EV fuel economy - Adampr

I thought Ami can be driven with category AM license as well. Which means moped license so someone with CBT and L plate legally allowed to drive? Or that's not the case?

No, you need a full licence. I looked into it for a neighbour who has no driving licence but would like to get out and about a bit more.

The same is true of a Renault Twizy, which is faster and a bit more expensive than an Ami but doesn't have doors...

EV fuel economy - sammy1

AMI is just a glorified moped with a roof. With a speed of just 28mph it should not be allowed on the road. It will be dangerous to users a bit like e bikes and e scooters. AT the very least AMI should only be used in 30mph built up areas. Can you imagine allowing one of these things on a fast road.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

Here is an interesting report from INDIA which is worth reading

"""Electric cars more harmful than conventional, hybrid cars: IIT Kanpur study - India Today

EV fuel economy - Adampr

Here is an interesting report from INDIA which is worth reading

"""Electric cars more harmful than conventional, hybrid cars: IIT Kanpur study - India Today

A good job we don't generate 75% of our electricity from coal

EV fuel economy - mcb100
An article written by India’s answer to Rowan Atkinson.
EV fuel economy - Terry W

Small ICE cars (eg: Picanto, MG3, Sandero) start at ~£13k.

Small EV start at ~£23k (eg: Fiat 500, Zoe). Smart and Ami ignored as they are both very compromised. As a working proposition the price difference is ~£10k.

Petrol for (say) 12000 miles pa at 60npg, £6.30 gallon = 200 gallons = £1260.

Buying EV depends entirely on personal circumstances. A 2nd car, mainly commuting and local use, charged at home, possibly via PV, possibly 2nd car it can make good sense.

Larger cars may have a different purchase cost differential - but the savings made on fuel will also be larger as they are normally less economical.

Forming a conclusion that EV means a lifetime will be spent on long journeys requiring frequent high cost recharging in motorway service areas whilst you become obese through a diet of big macs and shakes is a complete nonsense.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""Forming a conclusion that EV means a lifetime will be spent on long journeys requiring frequent high cost recharging in motorway service areas whilst you become obese through a diet of big macs and shakes is a complete nonsense."""

Sorry to disagree but at the moment it is a way of life for the EV brigade ploughing the motorways service stations. Until batteries improve then waiting around on coffee and Big Macs is bad for your health.

EV fuel economy - mcb100
‘ Sorry to disagree but at the moment it is a way of life for the EV brigade ploughing the motorways service stations. Until batteries improve then waiting around on coffee and Big Macs is bad for your health.’

Now you’re just talking nonsense. It’s difficult to come up with definitive figures, but estimates show 80-90% of charging being done at home. How many of the ‘EV brigade’ are routinely doing mileages that involve public charging? I don’t know. Do you?
Would it make you happier if I packed some nuts & seeds, maybe a plain yogurt to eat whilst I make the occasional charging stop?
EV fuel economy - sammy1
‘ Sorry to disagree but at the moment it is a way of life for the EV brigade ploughing the motorways service stations. Until batteries improve then waiting around on coffee and Big Macs is bad for your health.’ Now you’re just talking nonsense. It’s difficult to come up with definitive figures, but estimates show 80-90% of charging being done at home. How many of the ‘EV brigade’ are routinely doing mileages that involve public charging? I don’t know. Do you? Would it make you happier if I packed some nuts & seeds, maybe a plain yogurt to eat whilst I make the occasional charging stop?

No I don't know either but all the Teslas and the like that you and I see in service stations are certainly not casual journey or holiday traffic charging their EVs I doubt many company car owners even have a home charger. When hybrids first come out the charger cables on most didn't come out of the box. I wonder do you have a home charger for the cars that you test?

EV fuel economy - alan1302

Until batteries improve then waiting around on coffee and Big Macs is bad for your health.

Take a picnic and have what you like

EV fuel economy - alan1302

AMI is just a glorified moped with a roof. With a speed of just 28mph it should not be allowed on the road. It will be dangerous to users a bit like e bikes and e scooters. AT the very least AMI should only be used in 30mph built up areas. Can you imagine allowing one of these things on a fast road.

Like tractors?

EV fuel economy - sammy1

AMI is just a glorified moped with a roof. With a speed of just 28mph it should not be allowed on the road. It will be dangerous to users a bit like e bikes and e scooters. AT the very least AMI should only be used in 30mph built up areas. Can you imagine allowing one of these things on a fast road.

Like tractors?

Yes spot on!. Tractors and other slow moving farm equipment are involved in a lot of accidents

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""Standing charge: 42.01p / day"""

"""As a matter of interest is the standing charge additional to your domestic S/C some £153 a year?""

Somewhere up thread I asked the question on Octopus Home charger rates.

I am a duel fuel Octopus customer and for the life of me I cannot see an EV rate quoted by them. It seems you have to go through a rigmarole of questions and answers to get an answer. Why won't they post an honest rate?

So can anyone answer the question above is there a standing charge on the home charger car rate as well as the normal domestic rate?

EV fuel economy - Adampr

So can anyone answer the question above is there a standing charge on the home charger car rate as well as the normal domestic rate?

No. It all comes through the same meter.

EV fuel economy - FP

"I am a duel fuel Octopus customer and for the life of me I cannot see an EV rate quoted by them. It seems you have to go through a rigmarole of questions and answers to get an answer. Why won't they post an honest rate?"

I don't know what your problem is, but here you go:

octopus.energy/smart/go/

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"I am a duel fuel Octopus customer and for the life of me I cannot see an EV rate quoted by them. It seems you have to go through a rigmarole of questions and answers to get an answer. Why won't they post an honest rate?"

I don't know what your problem is, but here you go:

octopus.energy/smart/go/

Well we cannot all be as clever as you seeing you had obviously been there before. You might just have easily answered my question earlier yesterday when I asked. As you will be aware some searches on the net and for that matter on individual companies are not that easy to find. In any case the answer is yes there is a standing charge on EV tariffs which comes as no great surprise. For my area they are not as favourable as yours for what reason I do not know. I might might expect to have the same rate for everyone but that would be fair would it not.

The S/C rate is 52.18p per day

Perhaps with your great knowledge you would like to correct poster Adampr as I cannot be bothered

EV fuel economy - Adampr

The S/C rate is 52.18p per day

Perhaps with your great knowledge you would like to correct poster Adampr as I cannot be bothered

It's not an additional standing charge it's just the standing charge. You don't pay two tariffs - all of your electricity is bought on that one tariff. I know, I have been on that tariff.

EV fuel economy - FP

"... we cannot all be as clever as you..."

"... with your great knowledge..."

It's probably best I don't respond to sarcasm.

EV fuel economy - FP

"Tractors and other slow moving farm equipment are involved in a lot of accidents"

Are they?

Evidence?

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"Tractors and other slow moving farm equipment are involved in a lot of accidents"

Are they?

Evidence?

If you are too lazy to go looking try this

Fatal injuries in agriculture, forestry and fishing in Great Britain 2021/2022 (hse.gov.uk)

EV fuel economy - FP

I'm not being lazy - you made the point, you back it up.

And when I check out your link, I read this:

"Figures published in the Health and Safety Executive's report 'Fatal injuries in agriculture, forestry and fishing in Great Britain 2021/22' show 25 people were killed as a result of farming and other agriculture-related activities during the year.

Transport – overturning vehicles or being struck by moving vehicles, caused most deaths."

Nowhere does it specify that tractors on roads are involved in a lot of accidents. And I think it unlikely that they are. Your evidence doesn't prove your point.

It is well known that farming is a pretty dangerous activity, given that powerful machines often operate in unstable environments where risks can be difficult to anticipate. A school friend of mine was killed when a caterpillar tractor that he was using to pull out a tree root overturned, crushing him. That was in a field, not on a road.

Edited by FP on 06/06/2023 at 10:41

EV fuel economy - Adampr

"Tractors and other slow moving farm equipment are involved in a lot of accidents"

Are they?

Evidence?

If you are too lazy to go looking try this

Fatal injuries in agriculture, forestry and fishing in Great Britain 2021/2022 (hse.gov.uk)

Precisely zero of those happened on the public highway.

EV fuel economy - johncyprus

My son in law has now owned his hybrid 2023 Toyota Corolla estate for three months and reports he is getting 70 mpg. It replaced a woeful diesel BMW X3 and he is delighted with the Toyota. If it wasn’t for the tax breaks I suspect few would bother with electric cars.

Edited by johncyprus on 05/06/2023 at 23:02

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""'ve found the article comparing costs per mile. It also includes this gem:

"The vast weight of electric vehicles may also cause more potholes, according to the road-building association the Asphalt Industry Alliance. Due to their large batteries, electric vehicles are usually more than twice as heavy as average cars."

Journalism at its finest!

The Institute of Chartered Surveyors have concluded that the extra weight of EVs will render old multi story car parks unsafe and EVs should be banned or the car parks closed and demolished

Another true storey even if there might be an agenda but I would not want to be on the top floor parked next to some Mercedes SUV

EV fuel economy - Adampr

The Institute of Chartered Surveyors have concluded that the extra weight of EVs will render old multi story car parks unsafe and EVs should be banned or the car parks closed and demolished

Another true storey even if there might be an agenda but I would not want to be on the top floor parked next to some Mercedes SUV

I don't know who the Institute of Chartered Surveyors are, but the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, of which I am a member, has reached no such conclusion. Nor would we; if asked, any decent surveyor would refer the matter to a properly qualified structural engineer.

EV fuel economy - FP

"Another true storey even if there might be an agenda but I would not want to be on the top floor parked next to some Mercedes SUV"

Oh dear. It wouldn't bother me in the slightest.

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

"Another true storey even if there might be an agenda but I would not want to be on the top floor parked next to some Mercedes SUV"

Oh dear. It wouldn't bother me in the slightest.

Maybe the original typo was a well-disguised intentional pun ? After all, they were called multi-storey for a while ......

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"Another true storey even if there might be an agenda but I would not want to be on the top floor parked next to some Mercedes SUV"

Oh dear. It wouldn't bother me in the slightest.

Maybe the original typo was a well-disguised intentional pun ? After all, they were called multi-storey for a while ......

"""Car parks could collapse under weight of electric cars (telegraph.co.uk)

May be you missed this and many other articles on the dangers of old car parks or are you and some others just trying to be awkward? Why not just get on with the thread and come up with something a bit more interesting. Oh it is the Telegraph and not the Daily Mail so you may have missed it., Some on here seem particularly picky about there reading matter.

EV fuel economy - FP

"May be you missed this and many other articles on the dangers of old car parks or are you and some others just trying to be awkward?"

Maybe you don't get the point that many of us just don't believe it and think that stuff like this should be classified as sensational newspaper scare stories designed to outrage and scare the public - whether it's The Telegraph or The Daily Mail is immaterial.

"Being awkward" in one person's vocabulary equals "expressing criticism" or "casting doubt" in another's.

EV fuel economy - Adampr

"Another true storey even if there might be an agenda but I would not want to be on the top floor parked next to some Mercedes SUV"

Oh dear. It wouldn't bother me in the slightest.

Maybe the original typo was a well-disguised intentional pun ? After all, they were called multi-storey for a while ......

"""Car parks could collapse under weight of electric cars (telegraph.co.uk)

May be you missed this and many other articles on the dangers of old car parks or are you and some others just trying to be awkward? Why not just get on with the thread and come up with something a bit more interesting. Oh it is the Telegraph and not the Daily Mail so you may have missed it., Some on here seem particularly picky about there reading matter.

Just 'being awkward' again with those boring old facts; the report was by the Institute of Structural Engineers.

The report was about older car parks being loaded beyond their design capabilities as modern cars are heavier than those in the 60s. The stuff about EVs was introduced by the news media to make it sound more exciting. All cars are heavier than they used to be. For instance a VW Id.3 weighs about the same as a BMW 5 series. Yes, the Id.3 is smaller - my point is just that it's not extraordinarily heavy.

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

<< All cars are heavier than they used to be. For instance a VW Id.3 weighs about the same as a BMW 5 series. >>

Not only are they heavier, they have bigger footprints - while in most cases, the allocated parking spaces have stayed the same size. If the spaces had grown in proportion to the vehicles, perhaps the worry about overloading would be less ....

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

<< May be you missed this and many other articles on the dangers of old car parks or are you and some others just trying to be awkward? Why not just get on with the thread and come up with something a bit more interesting. >>

I'm not sure whether you are getting at me, or whether I am just one of the 'others', but I would mention that your thread is about 'EV fuel economy' but you introduced the topic of weak multi-storey car parks ? (which, incidentally. I had heard of, on here).

EV fuel economy - sammy1

<< May be you missed this and many other articles on the dangers of old car parks or are you and some others just trying to be awkward? Why not just get on with the thread and come up with something a bit more interesting. >>

I'm not sure whether you are getting at me, or whether I am just one of the 'others', but I would mention that your thread is about 'EV fuel economy' but you introduced the topic of weak multi-storey car parks ? (which, incidentally. I had heard of, on here).

Nothing personal. I am no structural engineer but it does seem common sense that when old multi storey car parks where designed they we designed to take a certain load spread over a given floor space. If years later the load increases then trouble lies ahead. Together with so called concrete cancer then pre-emptive measures seem obvious before the whole lot falls down. The same sort of monitoring of concrete structures such as road bridges is on going all the time. I cannot see what the fuss is just posting a press report whether it is guilded or not but not by me or anyone else on here

EV fuel economy - mcb100
‘ No I don't know either but all the Teslas and the like that you and I see in service stations are certainly not casual journey or holiday traffic charging their EVs I doubt many company car owners even have a home charger. When hybrids first come out the charger cables on most didn't come out of the box. I wonder do you have a home charger for the cars that you test?’

Because I don’t know, I don’t take guesses or conjure up hypotheses.
You’d be surprised how many prospective EV owners tell me that their employers will pay for a home charge point.
There was a large take up of the Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV, and a sizeable amount didn’t get plugged in. No idea whether it was ‘most’, though.
I don’t have off street parking, so, no, I don’t have means of charging an EV at home. But, then, I don’t own one - I collect them charged, use the public network, and return them charged.
My particular use of EV’s does not make up a suitable data set from which anyone can draw any conclusions.
EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""Because I don’t know, I don’t take guesses or conjure up hypotheses"""

I suppose the sight of single people turning up at chargers in Business suits Monday to Friday offers no clue? Thanks for the rest of the info

EV fuel economy - Terry W

The only reasons people charge at premium cost motorway services are:

  • long journey outside the range of the car
  • company cars - company pays - time is money
  • more money than sense despite a cost of living crisis

There are lots of cheaper non-m/way charging points even if home charging not possible.

As the average annual mileage is 9000 miles, it seems likely that most journeys are in local range - unless of course EV owners habitually take their cars out only once every 2 weeks on a 350 mile journey (implausible).

Unsurprisingly charging capacity is built (ideally) to match demand - so what you are almost certainly seeing is mainly demand from business travellers + the private owners on an occasional long journey.

EV fuel economy - movilogo
Many People Aren't Plugging In Their PHEVs, According To Study

insideevs.com/news/630341/plug-in-hybrids-arent-be.../

News from USA but UK may be similar.

EV fuel economy - badbusdriver

I suppose the sight of single people turning up at chargers in Business suits Monday to Friday offers no clue?

Maybe its a dating thing if it's only single people?

EV fuel economy - Adampr

I suppose the sight of single people turning up at chargers in Business suits Monday to Friday offers no clue?

Maybe its a dating thing if it's only single people?

Maybe the 'EV Brigade' are all doggers. Something to do whilst your battery's charging, and healthier than a McFlurry.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

I suppose the sight of single people turning up at chargers in Business suits Monday to Friday offers no clue?

Maybe its a dating thing if it's only single people?

Could well be what else is there to do while you while away 30minuts or so

EV fuel economy - Adampr
Many People Aren't Plugging In Their PHEVs, According To Study

insideevs.com/news/630341/plug-in-hybrids-arent-be.../

News from USA but UK may be similar.

That was fairly common with the first generation of European PHEVs - company car drivers were getting BMWs and Mercs with minimal range to save on BIK but no bothering to plug them in. Newer PHEVs seem a bit more sensible.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""Unsurprisingly charging capacity is built (ideally) to match demand - so what you are almost certainly seeing is mainly demand from business travellers + the private owners on an occasional long journey""

Exactly that, which is why I contradicted your previous statement. Although it is a fact from my observations at busy times that the number of chargers is not keeping up with demand and may be never will at peak. It will be interesting to see what happens in the main holiday season on peak weekends

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

Although it is a fact from my observations at busy times that the number of chargers is not keeping up with demand and maybe never will at peak. It will be interesting to see what happens in the main holiday season on peak weekends

The whole road network can't cope with peak traffic, so why should the charging network ? It is usually not cost effective (or cost feasible) to build any system capable of absorbing every practical demand, so at peak time it reaches saturation, and causes some grumbles.

Occasionally one has to queue at a normal filling station.

Edited by Andrew-T on 06/06/2023 at 17:59

EV fuel economy - alan1302

"""Because I don’t know, I don’t take guesses or conjure up hypotheses"""

I suppose the sight of single people turning up at chargers in Business suits Monday to Friday offers no clue? Thanks for the rest of the info

Why are you spending so much time at service stations watching who gets in and out of Teslas?

EV fuel economy - Adampr

"""Because I don’t know, I don’t take guesses or conjure up hypotheses"""

I suppose the sight of single people turning up at chargers in Business suits Monday to Friday offers no clue? Thanks for the rest of the info

Why are you spending so much time at service stations watching who gets in and out of Teslas?

He's after their McFlurrys.

EV fuel economy - alan1302

"""Because I don’t know, I don’t take guesses or conjure up hypotheses"""

I suppose the sight of single people turning up at chargers in Business suits Monday to Friday offers no clue? Thanks for the rest of the info

Why are you spending so much time at service stations watching who gets in and out of Teslas?

He's after their McFlurrys.

Can't fault that then - I do like a McFlurry

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""Because I don’t know, I don’t take guesses or conjure up hypotheses"""

I suppose the sight of single people turning up at chargers in Business suits Monday to Friday offers no clue? Thanks for the rest of the info

Why are you spending so much time at service stations watching who gets in and out of Teslas?

I am doing research on the dangers of too much caffeine and fast food.

EV fuel economy - mcb100
‘ Just 'being awkward' again with those boring old facts; the report was by the Institute of Structural Engineers.’

It wasn’t even that - it was a piece written by one of their members.

www.istructe.org/journal/volumes/volume-101-(2023)/issue-3/viewpoint-car-park-overloading-electric-vehicles/
EV fuel economy - mcb100
uk.motor1.com/news/276595/uk-hybrids-never-plugged.../

Here’s the UK report from a few years ago.
EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""The S/C rate is 52.18p per day

Perhaps with your great knowledge you would like to correct poster Adampr as I cannot be bothered

It's not an additional standing charge it's just the standing charge. You don't pay two tariffs - all of your electricity is bought on that one tariff. I know, I have been on that tariff.""""

My standing charge for Octopus duel fuel electric is 49.70p per day so why is the standing charge quoted by them 52.18p. OK thank you no additional S/C but they do appear to load up their normal S/C given the quote I got.

EV fuel economy - Adampr

"""The S/C rate is 52.18p per day

Perhaps with your great knowledge you would like to correct poster Adampr as I cannot be bothered

It's not an additional standing charge it's just the standing charge. You don't pay two tariffs - all of your electricity is bought on that one tariff. I know, I have been on that tariff.""""

My standing charge for Octopus duel fuel electric is 49.70p per day so why is the standing charge quoted by them 52.18p. OK thank you no additional S/C but they do appear to load up their normal S/C given the quote I got.

Octopus Go is 56.64p standing charge for me. No idea why it varies. I guess the infrastructure providers charge the suppliers different rates depending on region.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""The whole road network can't cope with peak traffic, so why should the charging network""

I am sorry but this is nonsense. The whole EV industry survives or fails on the charging infrastructure. At the moment it is generally admitted that the charging network is seriously behind where the GOV thinks it should be and some believe that this alone is one of the main reasons while EV uptake is slow. In may the sales of EVs was some 15.7% of some 151K sales. In 2022 the overall percentage was above 16%. So no growth at all when the industry should in theory be powering ahead. Most of the supply problems are said to be solved so it can only be demand unless anyone else has a theory, price not helping, interest rates, range, depreciation, no confidence in the product.

EV fuel economy - veloceman
I understand only 35% of the population would have access to off street therefore leaving 65% having to use costly 3rd party suppliers.
Not much incentive and I guess that’s where the take up will stall - only home charging makes economic sense.
EV fuel economy - mcb100
And yet it’s possible the figures are skewed the other way around -

www.field-dynamics.co.uk/25-drivers-no-off-street-.../
EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

"""The whole road network can't cope with peak traffic, so why should the charging network""

I am sorry but this is nonsense..

Please explain which part of this is nonsense - you have only said what you believe should not happen. I merely pointed out that traffic, and therefore demand, has large peaks and troughs. The biggest peaks cannot be fully catered for, simply on the grounds of expense and overcapacity.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""The whole road network can't cope with peak traffic, so why should the charging network""

I am sorry but this is nonsense..

Please explain which part of this is nonsense - you have only said what you believe should not happen. I merely pointed out that traffic, and therefore demand, has large peaks and troughs. The biggest peaks cannot be fully catered for, simply on the grounds of expense and overcapacity.

I respect your comment on some parts of the country at peak traffic but see my previous reason on the need to keep expanding the charger network and at a faster rate which is generally considered essential Your two reasons are not linked at least not at the moment or in the immediate future if the EV uptake is to continue at pace

EV fuel economy - alan1302

"""The S/C rate is 52.18p per day

Perhaps with your great knowledge you would like to correct poster Adampr as I cannot be bothered

It's not an additional standing charge it's just the standing charge. You don't pay two tariffs - all of your electricity is bought on that one tariff. I know, I have been on that tariff.""""

My standing charge for Octopus duel fuel electric is 49.70p per day so why is the standing charge quoted by them 52.18p. OK thank you no additional S/C but they do appear to load up their normal S/C given the quote I got.

49.70p + 5% VAT is 52.18p

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""The S/C rate is 52.18p per day

Perhaps with your great knowledge you would like to correct poster Adampr as I cannot be bothered

It's not an additional standing charge it's just the standing charge. You don't pay two tariffs - all of your electricity is bought on that one tariff. I know, I have been on that tariff.""""

My standing charge for Octopus duel fuel electric is 49.70p per day so why is the standing charge quoted by them 52.18p. OK thank you no additional S/C but they do appear to load up their normal S/C given the quote I got.

49.70p + 5% VAT is 52.18p

Sound maths but Octopus quote inclusive of VAT so coincidence

EV fuel economy - mcb100
‘ am sorry but this is nonsense. The whole EV industry survives or fails on the charging infrastructure. At the moment it is generally admitted that the charging network is seriously behind where the GOV thinks it should be ’

Funny, but I’m just having a conversation on Linkedin with a group of EV regulars who are making the opposite point - the number of rapid chargers sitting idle for long periods of time. I’ve been past the same set of 150’s & 350’s just off the M65 today three times and didn’t see a single car plugged in.
If all you see is press reports of queues at Tesla Superchargers over Christmas, I can understand how you’d come to your conclusion, but it really isn’t the case.
EV fuel economy - sammy1
‘ am sorry but this is nonsense. The whole EV industry survives or fails on the charging infrastructure. At the moment it is generally admitted that the charging network is seriously behind where the GOV thinks it should be ’ Funny, but I’m just having a conversation on Linkedin with a group of EV regulars who are making the opposite point - the number of rapid chargers sitting idle for long periods of time. I’ve been past the same set of 150’s & 350’s just off the M65 today three times and didn’t see a single car plugged in. If all you see is press reports of queues at Tesla Superchargers over Christmas, I can understand how you’d come to your conclusion, but it really isn’t the case.

So you and your mates have got it sorted, Plenty of chargers fast and slow? Not from my observation. Have things dramatically changed since Xmas? May be it is the parts of the UK I visit, rarely go north of Brum.

How would you account for the stalling of EV sales, do you have a view if it is not chargers?. The figures quoted are official

EV fuel economy - Adampr

How would you account for the stalling of EV sales, do you have a view if it is not chargers?. The figures quoted are official

I think it's most likely to be the gradual reduction of state incentives to buy them. The purchase subsidy is now a fond memory and BIK is increasing at 1% a year. Likewise, of course, electricity is currently nearly double what it was in price, so the economics are less appealing. Electricity prices will reduce, but nothing like as fast as fuel because they've snuck an infrastructure surcharge in whilst they're high.

At a market share of about 16% as stated, EVs can be considered a mainstream product and it's now over to the manufacturers to keep them there.

EV fuel economy - mcb100
‘ So you and your mates have got it sorted, Plenty of chargers fast and slow? Not from my observation. Have things dramatically changed since Xmas? May be it is the parts of the UK I visit, rarely go north of Brum.’

You carry on with your observations, and I’ll carry on actually using them on a daily basis.
EV fuel economy - sammy1

"""Rowan Atkinson's article has been critiqued and found wanting in a follow-up in The Guardian: www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jun/08/fact-c...s

In particular, he is accused of relying on factual inaccuracies and research that has now been debunked.

The article's author is Simon Evans, the deputy editor and senior policy editor at Carbon Brief, an organisation funded by the European Climate Foundation, an independent philanthropic initiative. Some may say that, although CB has won awards for investigative journalism, it and the ECF have an agenda.

I decided to move this forward as it took me ages to find it.

I am not a Guardian reader but the fact that they give a right to reply is good. It is hard to come down on any side. RA seems to be an ordinary person with a right to an opinion. Simon Evans on the other hand as a real agenda to push. Same as on here people do have opinions and they differ.

RA argument is once the ICE car is made it should be allowed to ""live out Its life" and not prematurely scrapped to be replaced. I can see a lot of sense in this. At the moment if replacing a car it is up to the individual and they should have a choice. The EV argument is not cut and dried in most peoples eyes at the moment.

The UK is going carbon free at too fast a pace. We are a very small country with little manufacturing compared to what is was. A lot of our"" heavy"" carbon is now imported and that trend continues. When you look at the rest of the world with countries like China we are but a drop in the Ocean as regards damage we may be doing in our carbon emissions. Everywhere you look it is carbon this and that but the human race continues at pace releasing more and more and it is rich countries companies and individuals responsible for the majority.

It is reported today that greenhouse emissions are at an all time high. When I look at my little greenhouse full of tomato plants it is difficult to understand how!.

EV fuel economy - FP

"It is reported today that greenhouse emissions are at an all time high. When I look at my little greenhouse full of tomato plants it is difficult to understand how!."

Rather a strange comment. Your "little greenhouse" has nothing whatsoever to do with "greenhouse emissions". You do realise that what you call "greenhouse emissions" is about gases like carbon dioxide which are emitted from combustion processes of various sorts? This is not connected with physical greenhouses - in fact your tomato plants, like other plants, will absorb carbon dioxide.

EV fuel economy - Adampr

Worth remembering that the reason all those countries are belching out carbon is because they're manufacturing more and more stuff for us to buy and, in some cases, burning our exported rubbish.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

"It is reported today that greenhouse emissions are at an all time high. When I look at my little greenhouse full of tomato plants it is difficult to understand how!."

Rather a strange comment. Your "little greenhouse" has nothing whatsoever to do with "greenhouse emissions". You do realise that what you call "greenhouse emissions" is about gases like carbon dioxide which are emitted from combustion processes of various sorts? This is not connected with physical greenhouses - in fact your tomato plants, like other plants, will absorb carbon dioxide.

Whatever has happened to a sense of humour. Correctness has even encroached to here. In fact my greenhouse is quite a big one.

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

We are a very small country with little manufacturing compared to what is was. A lot of our "heavy" carbon is now imported and that trend continues. When you look at the rest of the world with countries like China we are but a drop in the ocean as regards damage we may be doing in our carbon emissions.

We may not be manufacturing much now, but we rely for our consumption on China's output, so we are indirectly responsible for some of the Chinese emissions that you point a finger at. I personally thank the Chinese for accepting the pollution that would occur here if we made all the stuff we buy, but that doesn't relieve us of blame.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

""I personally thank the Chinese for accepting the pollution that would occur here if we made all the stuff we buy, but that doesn't relieve us of blame.""

What a nonsensical statement. I expect you have one of those Chinese security cameras that Rishi is rapidly getting rid of. China is a very important country in many ways but has questionable civil rights agendas and considered not to be trusted in so many ways

EV fuel economy - alan1302

""I personally thank the Chinese for accepting the pollution that would occur here if we made all the stuff we buy, but that doesn't relieve us of blame.""

What a nonsensical statement. I expect you have one of those Chinese security cameras that Rishi is rapidly getting rid of. China is a very important country in many ways but has questionable civil rights agendas and considered not to be trusted in so many ways

Why is it nonsensical? The device you are writing your reply on will have either been made in China or a large ammount of the componets will have been. That pollution in the manufacture is in China but is due to you buying that item. If they made them here it would increase the UKs pollution.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

""I personally thank the Chinese for accepting the pollution that would occur here if we made all the stuff we buy, but that doesn't relieve us of blame.""

What a nonsensical statement. I expect you have one of those Chinese security cameras that Rishi is rapidly getting rid of. China is a very important country in many ways but has questionable civil rights agendas and considered not to be trusted in so many ways

Why is it nonsensical? The device you are writing your reply on will have either been made in China or a large ammount of the componets will have been. That pollution in the manufacture is in China but is due to you buying that item. If they made them here it would increase the UKs pollution.

I have already acknowledges how import a country China is and in many ways the west has allowed it to become that way .and is too dependant in many ways.

Please don't get into a discussion of ours and theirs pollution The world is in the same position of global warming if you happen to think it is man made and not a cycle that has happened to the Earth over billions of years. The proof is there in fossils and the fossil fuel we are using now often extracted from miles under the sea that was once land and where the plants decayed and eventually formed fossils and fossil fuels.

EV fuel economy - alan1302

Please don't get into a discussion of ours and theirs pollution

If you don't want to get into a discussion about it then why call out someone and say they are talking nonsense? It is an important point though when people claim the UK has lower pollution rates than China when forgetting why China has higher pollution rates.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

Please don't get into a discussion of ours and theirs pollution

If you don't want to get into a discussion about it then why call out someone and say they are talking nonsense? It is an important point though when people claim the UK has lower pollution rates than China when forgetting why China has higher pollution rates.

This is the ""nonsense" statement again

""I personally thank the Chinese for accepting the pollution that would occur here if we made all the stuff we buy, but that doesn't relieve us of blame."

What is their to thank China about when is is reported to be still opening coal fire power stations a rate of one a day to fuel its economy and polluting its cities that you can hardly breath

Take the current situation in N. America Canada has the wild fires and New York and surrounding areas has the pollution. Just who's pollution is it. New York has it so it must be theirs now. If it blows back to Canada it will be theirs again. The point is it polluting the planet

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

What a nonsensical statement. I expect you have one of those Chinese security cameras that Rishi is rapidly getting rid of. China is a very important country in many ways but has questionable civil rights agendas and considered not to be trusted in so many ways

Once again - 'nonsense'. Sammy, you don't know the meaning of the word. You may expect what you like, but no, I have no security camera (whatever that has to do with the discussion) and in case you have other expectations, I have never owned any car of oriental manufacture. I am guilty of buying the occasional small plumbing item on E-bay, usually because the Chinese seem to have become the sole global maker thereof. Furthermore, if I go to an oriental restaurant it will be Indian or Bangladeshi.

In any case it seems hypocritical for Brits to buy Chinese stuff, and then blame them for the CO2 that comes with it. Or maybe you don't see that ?

EV fuel economy - Andrew-T

It is reported today that greenhouse emissions are at an all time high. When I look at my little greenhouse full of tomato plants it is difficult to understand how!.

You have claimed that this is a humorous remark. OK, but I can't see any reason to inject humour into what seems to be a serious discussion. 'Greenhouse emissions' have no connection with your plants, as you well know.

EV fuel economy - sammy1

It is reported today that greenhouse emissions are at an all time high. When I look at my little greenhouse full of tomato plants it is difficult to understand how!.

You have claimed that this is a humorous remark. OK, but I can't see any reason to inject humour into what seems to be a serious discussion. 'Greenhouse emissions' have no connection with your plants, as you well know.

This is a bit of a contradiction you say ""I claim it to be a humorous remark and then say "as you well know"" Yes i do well know I reckon a 5 year old probably does as we are all being brain washed with it

EV fuel economy - Xileno

Can we get back to the original theme of the thread now please.

Thanks

Mod