Braggfan
In the beginning there was nothing, which exploded
- May 12, 2014
- 1,986
the problem is we are driving forward on an assumption that technology change will happen. there are other drivers of course, environment etc, but this may likely be a case that an advance reduces utility. battery tech hasnt really moved for decades, there are physical constraints to overcome, Lithium made a big change at the small form end but doesnt scale (Tesla batteries are hundred of them strung together), charging speed is limited, power availability overlooked. there is a common view that through money and sheer willpower the problems will be solved. some of them may not, and if they can be it would take longer than the 10yr deadline being given. we havent rolled out smart meters in 10 yrs, i dont see how domestic electric systems will be uprated for example.
Yes I agree 'technological will change happen' is just an assumption, and a pretty big assumption. I think if that happens though that it will drive the assoicated tech development.
I understand what you say about the view that we just assume money and will power willl solve problems, but I don't think that's an assumption, i think it already happens all the time. Take the Co-vid vaccination for example. It didn't exist a year ago, the pandemic happened and companies were insturcted to create something that didn't exist. How do you do that? It's a crazy notion. But it was achieved because there was incredible will power from goverments seeking a solution combined with incredible investment. If those things are in place solutions do get found, particualrly in areas where you're not starting from scratch, where existing tech can be developed or improved upon.
But it brings us back to the big question from that that big assumption we agree on . Will the technology change happen that sees electric cars become the major driving force (pun intended)?
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