Electric cars are not THE solution.

  • 3ntranced@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    We just need to swap all roads out with big orange hot wheels tracks. I don’t know if it’d solve the problem but at least it’s a suggestion and it’d be sick as hell.

  • Salvo@aussie.zone
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    17 days ago

    The solution is fewer and lighter vehicles. Everyone purchasing oversized EVs is the exact opposite of the solution.

    Mass Transit (trains and light rail) Pushbikes, e-bikes, Subcompact, and micro/Kei cars are the answer.

      • Salvo@aussie.zone
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        17 days ago

        Polluting, inefficient, unsafe, noisy.

        If you go to South East Asian countries where the main form of transport is post WW2 motorbikes, you will notice that they aren’t the safest or most comfortable places to live.

        If you have a western budget, however, you can transcend the day-to-day hazards and live in a resort for a pittance.

        • sinkingship@mander.xyz
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          16 days ago

          Polluting - I don’t think so, except they’re 2 stroke engines, which are rare, nowadays. These days you see even more and more electric bikes.

          Inefficient - People often go 2, 3, 4 people on a bike that uses maybe 3 l/100km (78 MPG) or pull trailers wich stuff loaded, while using less space than a car.

          Unsafe - totally less safe for the people on the vehicle. I don’t know about pedestrians. However, a lot of the accidents happen, because poor education to get the license, if any; hardly any law enforcement and poor vehicle maintenance.

          Noisy - not more than a ICE car. Some motorbikes here have broken exhausts, which make them noisy, but that again is a lacking law enforcement and maintenance issue.

          I am aware, however, that driving 2 wheel vehicles in ice and snow is not a wise idea, so while it works in SEA, it would be different in colder climates.

          • Geth@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            16 days ago

            Maybe where you live 2 strokes are rare, but when we are talking cheap, it’s always 2 stroke. Especially the example the other person gave, Asia is full of 2 stroke engines, all super noisy and poluting. Living near a dense traffic street in Asia is a very interesting form of torture for anyone who enjoys clean air or peace and quiet.

            Hell, even where I live, they are mildly popular and very hard to miss when one goes by. To move to clean and quiet alternatives can’t come soon enough.

            • Salvo@aussie.zone
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              16 days ago

              Thank goodness that cheap e-bike motors and solar panels are available to these markets.

              Someone with a little bit of intelligence can retrofit an e-bike motor on a pushbike, put some solar panels on their roof, connected to some trusty Lead-Acid batteries in their hovel and they can recharge their e-bike or cargo-bike.

              • Geth@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                15 days ago

                Cheap is a very relative term and I doubt you can reach an equivalent gas powered two stroke on the same budget.

                In Asia they use these vehicles as their main mode of transportation, meaning they also need to have power, travel far and carry their family or shopping. Where I live people use these vehicles on the highway and e-bikes have legal restrictions and documentation. Good luck reaching the minimum required speed with an unlicensed self built ebike.

    • Mjpasta710@midwest.social
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      17 days ago

      Its not only rubber for car tires. There’s a lot of extras to add longevity, and change performance in certain conditions.

      Plastic is mostly made from hydrocarbon chains. So are rubber polymers it seems.

      Not sure if it matters if the plastic is from a tree or pumped from a really old tree.

    • maniii@lemmy.world
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      17 days ago

      There is a significant problem with media-reporting and scientific-studies being vetted for accuracy and peer-reviews.

      Plastics are organic polymerized compounds usually I think that fall under Alkyl, isoprenes, monomers ?

      Rubbers are organic polymerized compounds usually under elastomers / neoprenes / butadienes ?

      We NEED more nuance and not fearmongering,scaremongering and FUD about the man-made pollutants.

      Rubber pollution is a thing and plastics pollution is also a thing. How do we deal with each of them may require DIFFERENT strategies and NOT CRAZY-SHIT.

  • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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    17 days ago

    There is no alternative suggested. The purpose of this movement is to tax heavy EVs. I think that makes it distraction.

    The smaller the EV the more range per kwh, and so smaller batteries are needed which makes them more affordable. It is not unreasonable to tax heavy vehicles, but the punch line that motivates this piece is “EV’s bad”. They could have recommended micromobility for example.

    • Sonori@beehaw.org
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      16 days ago

      It would be funny though if some environmentalist managed to make the tax properly technology agnostic though. Mostly if you can keep them from being exempted anything that hurts EVs goes double for pickups.

      Of course we both know gas cars get exempted whenever this sort of thing passes because it’s never actually about vehicle weight and road wear so much as how can we slow the decline in gasoline demand for a few years, but it’s nice to imagine that silver lining.

    • mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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      17 days ago

      imho we should tax any vehicle that puts an inordinate strain on the roads. ultra-heavy EV’s like cybertrucks and hummers are ridiculous and inefficient, and the purchases knew it when they bought them.

      but also the cummins diesel powered pavement princess my colleague drives BY THEMSELVES TO THEIR OFFICE JOB day after day, I think that should have to pay an excise tax.

      work vehicles certainly deserve cutouts, but they need to be work appropriate vehicles, not just jacked up asshole haulers.

      • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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        17 days ago

        work vehicles certainly deserve cutouts

        That thinking is what got us SUVs. Work vehicles earn income, and so probably don’t need cutouts.

  • Coreidan@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    Cool and absolutely nothing will change.

    Oh I know maybe we can start making tires out of paper instead!

    • Agent641@lemmy.world
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      16 days ago

      If we make them out of asbestos (nature’s perfect material) then it will eliminate microplastics and help to reduce car usership dramatically over the long term.

  • nesc@lemmy.cafe
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    17 days ago

    How can you not own a car while living in a city with >1m population, are you mad? /s

    • Akasazh@feddit.nl
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      16 days ago

      Well the was this idea of propelling trains through a vacuum tube system.

      Unfortunately it’s being developed by a shithead and misappropriated by the car industry to hamper railway development in the us

    • ___@lemm.ee
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      17 days ago

      Hyperloop theoretically, practically who knows.

    • Droechai@lemm.ee
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      17 days ago

      There are some vehicles that go on iron wheels, on a special kind of iron road that are very efficient. Only bad parts are costly initial investment and difficulties to scale up if the existing network gets overloaded (such as the Swedish rail system who has been over “maximum” capacity for a long time which has put needed maintenance on hold at many places)

      • sinkingship@mander.xyz
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        16 days ago

        I somehow doubt they would have less particles from friction. They usually use a cushion which touches the ground.

        The imagination of a busy intersection with common people driving hovercrafts is funny, though. Or imagine driving on slopes.

    • moonbunny@sh.itjust.works
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      17 days ago

      Maybe there’s some kind of a wheel, like a metal wheel that could just glide across narrow metal surfaces that could follow a set path….

  • Num10ck@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    whatever happened to the green tire technologies that get announced by the big mfg and then never come to market… like the mushroom based materials

    • assassinatedbyCIA@lemmy.world
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      17 days ago

      Usually stuff like that is just a distraction so companies can do greenwashing while delaying the implementation of real solutions. I’m going to guess that’s the case but, I haven’t really looked into it.

  • vinnymac@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    We need a clever solution to this problem, because our govts are unlikely to solve this through new infrastructure or policy changes.

    I’ve been reading about this topic for a while now, and I always thought the tech these guys invented was worth further investment: https://smarttirecompany.com/

    • Pulptastic@midwest.social
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      17 days ago

      Less rubber is good but we really need a rubber replacement that is biodegradable.

      Nickel alloys are expensive and require some nasty mining so shape memory tires are a stopgap solution at best.

      • vinnymac@lemmy.world
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        17 days ago

        Material sciences is a difficult field. People spend years researching one small area just to shelve their research as not viable, too cost prohibitive, or impractical for large scale manufacturing.

        I haven’t seen any research into durable biodegradable materials that could hold the weight of vehicles unfortunately, so I think investment will be hard to come by. Though I don’t disagree with the premise that something that can degrade over time, but also not harm the environment would be an ideal solution to the problem. I imagine if such a thing were created it would be able to be applied to many other industries, not just transportation.

        • Pulptastic@midwest.social
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          17 days ago

          Michelin and Bridgestone have shown off proof of concept biodegradable tires but nothing to the market yet. It is possible, and will take incremental progress as you say. I’d like to see more work and updates on this.

    • Mihies@programming.dev
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      16 days ago

      Binary view is a poor one. EVs have a lot of benefits and also some drawbacks. As everything in the world, they are not perfect. The trick is that they have much more benefits than drawbacks.

    • cally [he/they]@pawb.social
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      17 days ago

      A lot of people think that. The solution to car pollution is less cars and more forms of transport. It’s trains. I like trains.

    • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      17 days ago

      Helping one problem and not helping them all means it’s better to do nothing according to a lot of people. If you are anti cars that’s one thing, but to specifically aim it at EVs is clearly just targeted propaganda as always.

      Yes we put 100 years of research into gas powered cars, 15 years of research (or less by most companies) and the weight isn’t the same yet so they want to toss all advantages of moving to them.

      Look at things like the Telos Truck. 4,400 pounds, 4 doors, small and can fit a 8’x4’ sheet of plywood if needed in the bed.

      Length of a mini Cooper, so it fits in smaller parking spots, weighs less than the average ICE truck, costs less than the average ICE truck and will have less impact on tires people worry about here, while not shipping oil across oceans and causing cancer to the people in the vicinity.

  • PlantDadManGuy@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    Good thing DOGE and the rest of the Trump fueled Republicans are foaming at the mouth to completely eliminate federal funding for the California high speed rail project. Thank God they’re going to save us from affordable transportation for the masses in favor of continuing to murder the planet actively by distributing microplastics into every square millimeter of the Earth.