As an Australian I don’t find this beautiful at all 😠 We only have a single tiny territory (our equivalent of America’s DC) with any phase out plans. Our government is just so incredibly beholden to fossil fuel interests. It’s incredibly frustrating.
But Japan is one that surprises me, considering how slow their domestic industry has been to adopt electric cars compared to China and Korea. I thought they were going in on hydrogen, despite it not really making serious progress.
(Although an obligatory [email protected] and reminder that even EVs are terrible for the environment and are much worse societally than public transport and bikes.)
I don’t really believe in the hydrogen car solution, but I did have the chance to ride in a very nice hydrogen car in Korea and wow… it was a very smooth ride.
It’s definitely not a complete scam tech, and it will likely have its place. It’s just not especially feasible at the same scale that battery electrics are.
I’m not particularly surprised about China. They’re making big advances in this area. Their continued growth in carbon emissions is alongside growth in renewables because their total energy usage is growing insanely fast.
With cars specifically, think about cars you’ve seen on the road here in Australia. Of the EVs, where have you seen them from? Apart from Teslas, the vast majority I’ve seen have been either Chinese or Korean.
They introduced regulations that fossil fuel motorcycles were only allowed every other day. Electric mopeds were allowed any day.
Most mopeds in Chinese cities are electric ones now. Out in the sticks you’ll still find combustion ones.
But they seriously needed that. The smog in the cities back then were live-threatening.
China have some very big cities and the pollution alone has been causing lots of health related problems. They have an incentive to migrate to EV’s on those grounds alone.
I’m also surprised about China, not for any other reason than their track record on pollution hasn’t been great.
That’s because they’re not deinstitutionalizing like Europe, and in fact their industry is still growing. A lot of European advances in reducing pollution came because they simply exported it elsewhere.
As an Australian I don’t find this beautiful at all 😠 We only have a single tiny territory (our equivalent of America’s DC) with any phase out plans. Our government is just so incredibly beholden to fossil fuel interests. It’s incredibly frustrating.
But Japan is one that surprises me, considering how slow their domestic industry has been to adopt electric cars compared to China and Korea. I thought they were going in on hydrogen, despite it not really making serious progress.
(Although an obligatory [email protected] and reminder that even EVs are terrible for the environment and are much worse societally than public transport and bikes.)
I don’t really believe in the hydrogen car solution, but I did have the chance to ride in a very nice hydrogen car in Korea and wow… it was a very smooth ride.
It’s definitely not a complete scam tech, and it will likely have its place. It’s just not especially feasible at the same scale that battery electrics are.
Yeah this really sucks.
Especially the proliferation of American style ute’s in recent years, like we’re the only two places in the world that will tolerate the emissions.
I’m also surprised about China, not for any other reason than their track record on pollution hasn’t been great.
I’m not particularly surprised about China. They’re making big advances in this area. Their continued growth in carbon emissions is alongside growth in renewables because their total energy usage is growing insanely fast.
With cars specifically, think about cars you’ve seen on the road here in Australia. Of the EVs, where have you seen them from? Apart from Teslas, the vast majority I’ve seen have been either Chinese or Korean.
They introduced regulations that fossil fuel motorcycles were only allowed every other day. Electric mopeds were allowed any day.
Most mopeds in Chinese cities are electric ones now. Out in the sticks you’ll still find combustion ones.
But they seriously needed that. The smog in the cities back then were live-threatening.
Interesting move to ban them every second day.
China have some very big cities and the pollution alone has been causing lots of health related problems. They have an incentive to migrate to EV’s on those grounds alone.
That’s because they’re not deinstitutionalizing like Europe, and in fact their industry is still growing. A lot of European advances in reducing pollution came because they simply exported it elsewhere.