Google AI
The Times Australia
The Times World News

.

Electric vehicles will start to cut emissions and improve air quality in our cities – but only once they’re common

  • Written by: John Rose, Professor of Sustainable Future Transport, University of Sydney
Electric vehicles will start to cut emissions and improve air quality in our cities – but only once they’re common

Electric vehicles are often seen as the panacea to cutting emissions – and air pollution – from transport.

Is this view correct? Yes – but only once uptake accelerates. Despite the recent boom in EV purchases, they’re still a tiny minority of the cars on the road.

We would get more immediate benefit by focusing on electrifying buses, which are a surprisingly large source of air pollution, and finding ways to cut rapidly growing emissions from diesel trucks.

While the electricity sector still produces the largest share of emissions in Australia (32.3%), emissions are falling. But emissions from transport (21.1%) are already the third-largest contributor – and are rising faster and faster[1].

Critics say EVs just shift the emissions and pollution from tailpipe to power plant smokestack. This is only partly true. A grid powered by brown coal could indeed mean EVs are dirtier than we think. But as more and more clean energy pours into the grid (or behind the grid, in the form of solar on our rooftops), this becomes less and less of a concern. Charging your EV from rooftop solar is emissions-free, and charging from a high-renewable grid means very low emissions. But even when powered by a coal grid, EVs are still much cleaner than petrol or diesel cars.

woman charging EV
EVs are cleaner than internal combustion engines – but the amount differs. husjur02/Shutterstock[2]

Can EVs really improve air quality?

Combustion engines expel smog-causing chemicals that are dangerous to our health, such as carbon monoxide, soot and nitrogen oxides.

Countries such as Norway and China have embraced EVs faster than others. As Chinese researchers have found[3], air quality in polluted cities begins to improve as EVs arrive in numbers. American researchers have found[4] even small increases in the proportion of EVs improves air quality and reduces the number of people attending hospital with asthma attacks.

What most people think of as EVs are battery electric vehicles made by companies such as Tesla or BYD. While hybrid cars have small batteries, they still have combustion engines. By contrast, battery-electric cars do away with it entirely in favour of much larger lithium-ion battery packs.

If you look at the entire lifecycle of a vehicle, emissions associated with an average EV – including production, shipping, maintenance, recycling, and of course use – are estimated to be just 12%[5] those of a traditional combustion engine vehicle.

Cutting emissions and cleaning air means actually using EVs

The main challenge in cutting transport emissions is no longer technological – it’s uptake.

Last year, more than 8%[6] of new vehicles sold in Australia were EVs. That’s a big jump up from the previous year’s figure of 3.6%.

But the real figure we should focus on is smaller – 1.2%. That’s the proportion of EVs across Australia’s entire passenger vehicle fleet. That is, of the 15.3 million passenger cars, utes and vans on our roads, just 181,000 are EVs as of the beginning of 2023[7].

So yes, uptake is accelerating. But based on current market trends, it will be at least 15 years before EVs outnumber internal combustion vehicles in Australia, and at least a decade after before these polluting vehicles disappear from our roads. (It’s likely they won’t disappear entirely, due to hobbyists and collectors.)

This is why government initiatives such as the New Vehicle Energy Standards[8] are important – they speed up this transition. Even with this, it will be decades before we actually see falls in transport emissions.

battery for EV Battery electric vehicles rely on many battery cells linked together. IM Imagery/Shutterstock[9]

What if the grid is dirty?

Critics of EVs claim these vehicles are a form of greenwashing[10]. If the power grid runs on dirty coal, the vehicles run on dirty coal.

Is this correct? Yes and no. First, battery electric vehicles have the benefit of zero tailpipe emissions, meaning city air quality will slowly improve.

But do they just push emissions out of the cities and into the hinterland, where the power plants are?

The answer is, it depends. Take the popular Tesla Model 3 as an example. These battery electric sedans are manufactured in both China and the United States. The Teslas we buy here in Australia are typically made in China.

While China is building out its renewable sector at tremendous speed[11], for now it is is still heavily reliant on black coal. The US, meanwhile, relies much more on gas, which produces fewer emissions when burned. That means a Tesla made in China is estimated to create 154% more emissions[12] than the same vehicle made in the US.

As such, an Australian Tesla driver is (inadvertently) more polluting than their US counterpart – but still much less so than a driver of an equivalent petrol vehicle.

Where the EV is driven also matters. For example, a Tesla Model 3 driven in New South Wales and charged at public chargers will produce nearly 15,500kg of carbon dioxide equivalent over a 16-year timeframe. That’s because the state still has several coal-fired power stations[13], though this is changing. By contrast, drive and charge it in hydroelectricity-powered Tasmania and you’ll generate less than 500kg.

Read more: How climate-friendly is an electric car? It all comes down to where you live[14]

Transport emissions are more than just our cars

When we look at how to clean up transport, we have to look at trucks and buses.

Surprisingly, total petrol use has been falling in Australia for almost 20 years[15]. The average car is driven 2,000km less per year than it was ten years ago – a trend that was happening even before COVID.

But demand for diesel has soared, almost doubling over the same period. That’s due to the growth in articulated trucks. While diesel engines produce fewer emissions than petrol, the boom in trucking[16] means emissions keep climbing.

Electric trucks are beginning to appear. These will likely substitute for smaller trucks operating within a city at first, as the weight of batteries makes long-distance trucks less viable.

Electric buses are popping up on the streets of cities such as Melbourne and Perth. But it’s a similar story to cars – while the bus industry is enthusiastic, only around 0.2% of Australia’s buses are electric.

Put this all together, and you have a simple conclusion. Electric cars, trucks and buses can indeed cut transport emissions and clean up air in Australia. But slow adoption rates mean it will be decades before we really see the impact – and we’ll need a much greener grid to charge cleanly.

Read more: Why electric trucks are our best bet to cut road transport emissions[17]

References

  1. ^ faster and faster (www.dcceew.gov.au)
  2. ^ husjur02/Shutterstock (www.shutterstock.com)
  3. ^ have found (www.sciencedirect.com)
  4. ^ have found (www.sciencedirect.com)
  5. ^ just 12% (www.sciencedirect.com)
  6. ^ more than 8% (www.smh.com.au)
  7. ^ as of the beginning of 2023 (www.bitre.gov.au)
  8. ^ New Vehicle Energy Standards (theconversation.com)
  9. ^ IM Imagery/Shutterstock (www.shutterstock.com)
  10. ^ form of greenwashing (www.theguardian.com)
  11. ^ tremendous speed (www.carbonbrief.org)
  12. ^ 154% more emissions (www.sciencedirect.com)
  13. ^ coal-fired power stations (reneweconomy.com.au)
  14. ^ How climate-friendly is an electric car? It all comes down to where you live (theconversation.com)
  15. ^ almost 20 years (www.bitre.gov.au)
  16. ^ boom in trucking (www.bitre.gov.au)
  17. ^ Why electric trucks are our best bet to cut road transport emissions (theconversation.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/electric-vehicles-will-start-to-cut-emissions-and-improve-air-quality-in-our-cities-but-only-once-theyre-common-227364

Times Magazine

Federal Budget and Motoring: Luxury Car Tax, Fuel Excise and the Cost of Driving in Australia

For millions of Australians, the Federal Budget is not an abstract economic document discussed onl...

Buying a New Car: Insider Tips

Buying a new car is one of the largest purchases many Australians make outside buying a home. Yet ...

Hybrid Vehicles: What Is a Hybrid, an EV and a Plug-In Hybrid?

Australia’s car market is changing faster than at any point since the decline of the local Holden ...

Chinese Cars: If You Are Not Willing to Risk Buying One, What Are the Current Affordable Petrol Alternatives

For years Australian motorists shopping for an affordable new car generally looked toward familiar...

Australia’s East Coast Braces for Wet Week as Weather Pattern Shifts

Large sections of Australia’s east coast are preparing for a significant period of wet weather as ...

A Report From France: The Mood of a Nation

France occupies a unique place in the global imagination. To many outsiders, it remains the land ...

The Times Features

Real Estate and the Federal Budget: Early Signs Emergin…

Australia’s federal budget has landed, and while economists, investors and political strategists c...

The Modern Causes of Back Pain and What You Can Do

Key Highlights Modern lifestyles are a major contributor to ongoing back painPosture, movement, a...

What to Know About Adding Natural Oils to Your Wellness…

Key Highlights Natural oils are commonly used to support everyday wellbeingConsistency and qualit...

How Online Mental Health Support Is Changing Access to …

Key Highlights Online mental health services are improving accessibility for many individualsFlex...

Why every drop counts

Accurate water measurement and confidence in Sustainable Diversion Limits (SDLs) are essential to ...

Dining Out Is Expensive. Buying High Quality Meat and F…

For many Australians, dining out has quietly shifted from a weekly habit to an occasional indulgen...

REFLECTIONS: A Legacy in the Rain at Carla Zampatti AFW…

Words & Photography by Cesar Ocampo There is a specific kind of magic that happens when high fa...

Where Our Batteries Come From: Battery making is big bu…

Batteries are now so deeply embedded in modern life that most people rarely stop to think about th...

Did Trump Secure China’s Assistance to Protect Middle E…

As tensions in the Middle East continue to threaten global energy markets, a new geopolitical ques...