Mo Gosfield
Well-known member
- Aug 11, 2010
- 6,362
Should be long prison sentences for motorists trying to keep the highways and byways clear.I trust the arrests were of the motorists for assault?
Should be long prison sentences for motorists trying to keep the highways and byways clear.I trust the arrests were of the motorists for assault?
Electric cars have their uses and benefits, but trying to argue that a Leaf can match a petrol car for long journeys just gives ammunition to your opponents.Having owned a 2014 Leaf in the past, and a 2008 Civic, I’d argue that the Civic (on first inspection) seems a more solid product, but the Leaf is also very well put together, and I would actually have a Leaf again over a Civic. The Civic proved a far more costly ownership experience, was less comfortable, and had worse visibility. The Leaf is the better car.
Equally you can still do long trips in the Leaf, you just need to budget in a 30 minute stop per hundred miles. Just time for a nice coffee and to get rid of the coffee you had the last time you stopped.
I’m curious to know how many times a week most people drive over 124 miles in one go, though
You describe the real problem with solving global warming perfectly.Electric cars have their uses and benefits, but trying to argue that a Leaf can match a petrol car for long journeys just gives ammunition to your opponents.
Remember that this is the 24kw Leaf, not the modern version, and 70mph driving costs a third of the range so your suggestion would have to involve pootling along with wagons overtaking for maximum range. The 2015 Leaf is a runabout car, or a second car, not a car for long (or even middle) distances.
They could just not drive. That would make them clearerShould be long prison sentences for motorists trying to keep the highways and byways clear.
Yes, that is a real problem. At present, the people who are willing to take one less foreign holiday and give up petrol cars, are the people who have two foreign holidays a year and have the money to pay for an electric car. It is going to be a problem to get the people who have only one foreign holiday and can't afford a new car, to follow suit.You describe the real problem with solving global warming perfectly.
We, as consumers, will continue to ignore global warming so long as to do otherwise costs us more, is less convenient or not as immediately pleasurable.
Yep, vigilante behaviour has no place in a civilised society.Should be long prison sentences for motorists trying to keep the highways and byways clear.
Wow...never thought of that.They could just not drive. That would make them clearer
Electric cars have their uses and benefits, but trying to argue that a Leaf can match a petrol car for long journeys just gives ammunition to your opponents.
Remember that this is the 24kw Leaf, not the modern version, and 70mph driving costs a third of the range so your suggestion would have to involve pootling along with wagons overtaking for maximum range. The 2015 Leaf is a runabout car, or a second car, not a car for long (or even middle) distances.
The "low hanging fruit" in this debate is absolutely to target the wealthy (both individuals and nations). We* are the big problem consumers....much more effective to get those of us who travel a lot, have larger houses, maybe two cars, etc, etc, to change our habits.Yes, that is a real problem. At present, the people who are willing to take one less foreign holiday and give up petrol cars, are the people who have two foreign holidays a year and have the money to pay for an electric car. It is going to be a problem to get the people who have only one foreign holiday and can't afford a new car, to follow suit.
Ditto foreign policy. In the UK we can say we need to cut fossil fuel power by x% and replace it with renewable, but much of the world doesn't have the money for that as they chase the almost-undreamed-of wealth that we have. They want electricity and fuel as cheaply as possible. Unless we of the rich countries can find a way to double and quadruple the power output of poorer countries while still reducing their fossil fuel usage, we won't get anywhere.
and china? logic is your friendAnd ?..
simply put, it's thermal differentialsI didn't know that the wind was caused by man made climate change . Just goes to show that you are never to old to learn
your logic being that we should burn more oil?They are opening more Coal power stations still
The point at issue was that a 2015 Nissan Leaf is a cheaper and valid alternative to a petrol car. That's all. Few people would buy a 2015 Leaf ahead of a petrol car if they are going to make a long drive every month.While I absolutely agree that you wouldn’t make a 2015 Leaf your first choice if you were travelling hundreds of miles a day every day, that is not the real-world use case for most car owners. Other EVs are available.
I would argue that nobody regardless of their fitness and familiarity with long drives should be driving more than 200 miles at a time on public roads without taking a break. Once you get past cars that will comfortably give you 200 miles real world use in a single charge, the vehicle’s range is no longer the issue, it’s the safety of other road users from having somebody who hasn’t taken a break for what’s likely to be about 4 hours on the road with them.
Most of us commute, possibly go out again in the evening, and maybe 10-12 times a year do trips for family, or work, or pleasure that are longer than usual.
The inconvenience of a couple of half hour stops a month is surely the lesser evil over watching areas of Europe, the US and China burn?
How would you convince people?How are you going to convince people that if thy replace their petrol car with a mostly-gas-generated-electric car, that it will make a significant difference?
That’s what I’d describe as a sweeping generalisation that doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. E.g, a quick glance at Auto Trader will tell you that the average price of a 2015 plate Nissan Leaf is less than a 2015 plate Honda Civic. Both Japanese cars, both hatches, both seat the same number of people.
Back at yaWith the greatest of respect, you’re wrong.
I think he asked you that.How would you convince people?
Didn't ask me, but I get your point. I am interested in hearing what someone who is seemingly skeptical would suggest. They don't have to answer.I think he asked you that.
No idea. Persuading people to take a significant drop in lifestyle for the sake of general but unspecific future benefits is usually impossible.How would you convince people?
All valid points, why would someone take a significant drop in lifestyle for the sake of general but unspecific future benefits?No idea. Persuading people to take a significant drop in lifestyle for the sake of general but unspecific future benefits is usually impossible.
The Just Stop Oil people, apart from the extreme but rational fringes who live in woodland communes with very little power usage, are only playing round the edges. What we would need to do to have a chance of convincing the world to change its ways is to make sure that the UK uses less power (not just less fossil fuels, but less power) than the average. Other counties, most of which are still vastly poorer than us, are not going to damage their chances of wealth unless they see us damaging our accumulated wealth and lifestyle. (And probably not then.) And who in this country is going to vote for a lifestyle less affluent than half the world?