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posted by on Saturday February 04 2017, @05:15AM   Printer-friendly
from the looking-forward-to-electric-planes dept.

Transportation accounts for a huge portion of US carbon emissions. As recently as 2014, it was behind the electricity sector — 26 percent of US emissions to electricity's 30 percent. But as the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) just confirmed, as of 2016, they have crossed paths. "Electric power sector CO2 emissions," EIA writes, "are now regularly below transportation sector CO2 emissions for the first time since the late 1970s."

This is happening because power sector "carbon intensity" — carbon emissions per unit of energy produced — is falling, as coal is replaced with natural gas, renewables, and efficiency.

The only realistic prospect for reducing transportation sector emissions rapidly and substantially is electrification. How much market share EVs take from oil (gasoline is by far the most common use for oil in the US) will matter a great deal.

[...] Today saw the release of a new study from the Grantham Institute for Imperial College London and the Carbon Tracker Initiative. It argues that solar photovoltaics (PV) and EVs together will kick fossil fuel's ass, quickly.

"Falling costs of electric vehicle and solar technology," they conclude, "could halt growth in global demand for oil and coal from 2020." That would be a pretty big deal.

The "business as usual" (BAU) scenarios that typically dominate these discussions are outdated, the researchers argue. New baseline scenarios should take into account updated information on PV, EV, and battery costs. (The EIA doesn't expect inflation-adjusted prices of EVs to fall to $30,000 until 2030, even as multiple automakers say they'll hit that within a few years.)

[...] If these forecasts play out, fossil fuels could lose 10 percent market share to PV and EVs within a decade. A 10 percent loss in market share was enough to send the US coal industry spiraling, enough to cause Europe's utilities to hemorrhage money. It could seriously disrupt life for the oil majors. "Growth in EVs alone could lead to 2 million barrels of oil per day being displaced by 2025," the study says, "the same volume that caused the oil price collapse in 2014-15."

Source: http://www.vox.com/science-and-health/2017/2/2/14467748/electric-vehicles-oil-market


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 04 2017, @11:08PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 04 2017, @11:08PM (#462961)

    Almost 50% INCREASE since 1990s. We are almost at record production of coal world wide. So, what are you talking about this "10% drop"?? Doesn't stack with reality.

    You cited a report of the numbers through 2014. That was the top. Since then coal consumption has decreased [instituteforenergyresearch.org] which is why so many coal companies have gone bankrupt in the last year. [reuters.com]

    90 MILLION cars produced in 2015. And Increasing. And Tesla?

    Its misleading to cite worldwide production numbers when comparing to tesla sales since tesla is primarily just US sales.
    US sales are about ~17 million cars per year. [autonews.com]

    And why just tesla? Nissan has sold more leafs [insideevs.com] than tesla has sold all models combined.
    And now the chevy bolt is on the market.

    Frankly the fact that you had all these numbers that were vastly different from the article ought to have been a clue that maybe you weren't talking about the same things. But instead you dived in with the accusation that authors are just lying, oh excuse me "bullshitting." You obviously had an agenda and you were willing to misrepresent in order to push that agenda instead of making an honest point. That's the real bullshit here.