The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

The dirt on clean electric cars

Most battery supply will come from places that rely on non-renewable sources like coal

-

STOCKHOLM: Beneath the hoods of millions of the clean electric cars rolling onto the world’s roads in the next few years will be a dirty battery.

Every major carmaker has plans for electric vehicles to cut greenhouse gas emissions, yet their manufactur­ers are, by and large, making lithium-ion batteries in places with some of the most polluting grids in the world.

By 2021, capacity will exist to build batteries for more than 10 million cars running on 60 kilowatt-hour packs, according to data of Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

Most supply will come from places like China, Thailand, Germany and Poland that rely on non-renewable sources like coal for electricit­y.

“We’re facing a bow wave of additional CO2 emissions,” said Andreas Radics, a managing partner at Munich-based automotive consultanc­y Berylls Strategy Advisors, which argues that for now, drivers in Germany or Poland may still be better off with an efficient diesel engine.

The findings, among the more bearish ones around, show that while electric cars are emission-free on the road, they still discharge a lot of the carbon-dioxide that convention­al cars do.

Just to build each car battery – weighing upwards of 500 kilograms in size for sport-utility vehicles – would emit up to 74% more C02 than producing an efficient convention­al car if it is made in a factory powered by fossil fuels in a place like Germany, according to Berylls’ findings.

Yet regulators haven’t set out clear guidelines on acceptable carbon emissions over the lifecycle of electric cars, even as the likes of China, France and the UK move toward outright bans of combustion engines.

“It will come down to where the battery is made, how it is made, and even where we get our electric power from,” said Henrik Fisker, chief executive officer and chairman of Fisker Inc, a California-based developer of electric vehicles.

For perspectiv­e, the average German car owner could drive a gas-guzzling vehicle for three and a half years, or more than 50,000 kilometers, before a Nissan Leaf with a 30 kWh battery would beat it on carbon-dioxide emissions in a coal-heavy country, Berylls estimates show.

And that’s one of the smallest batteries on the market: BMW’s i3 has a 42 kWh battery, Mercedes’s upcoming EQC crossover will have a 80 kWh battery, and Audi’s e-tron will come in at 95 kWh.

With such heavy batteries, an electric car’s carbon footprint can grow quite large even beyond the showroom, depending on how it’s charged. Driving in France, which relies heavily on nuclear power, will spit out a lot less CO2 than Germany, where 40% of the grid burns on coal.

“It’s not a great change to move from diesel to German coal power,” said NorthVolt AB CEO Peter Carlsson, a former Tesla manager who is trying to build a 4bil (US$4.6bil) battery plant in Sweden that would run on hydropower.

“Electric cars will be better in every way but of course, when batteries are made in a coal-based electricit­y system it will take longer” to surpass diesel engines, he said.

To be sure, other studies show that even in coal-dominant Poland, using an electric car would emit 25% less carbon dioxide than a diesel car, according to Transport & Environmen­t Brussels, a body that lobbies the European Union for sustainabl­e environmen­tal policy.

The benefit of driving battery cars in cities will be immediate: their quiet motors will reduce noise pollution and curb toxins like nitrogen oxide, NOX, a chemical compound spewed from diesel engines that’s hazardous to air quality and human health.

“In downtown Oslo, Stockholm, Beijing or Paris, the most immediate considerat­ion is to improve air quality and the quality of life for the people who live there,” said Christoph Stuermer, the global lead analyst for Pricewater­houseCoope­rs Autofacts.

But electric cars aren’t as clean as they could be. Just switching to renewable energy for manufactur­ing would slash emissions by 65%, according to Transport & Environmen­t.

In Norway, where hydro-electric energy powers practicall­y the entire grid, the Berylls study showed electric cars generate nearly 60% less CO2 over their lifetime, compared with even the most efficient fuel-powered vehicles.

As it is now, manufactur­ing an electric car pumps out “significan­tly” more climate-warming gases than a convention­al car, which releases only 20% of its lifetime C02 at this stage, according to estimates of Mercedes-Benz’s electric-drive system integratio­n department.

“Life-cycle emissions in electric vehicles depend on how much the car is driven in order to get to a point of crossover on diesels,” Ola Kallenius, the Daimler AG board member who will take over as CEO next year, said at the Paris Motor Show this month.

“By 2030, the lifecycle issue will improve.” — Bloomberg

It will come down to where the battery is made, how it is made, and even where we get our electric power from. Henrik Fisker

 ??  ?? Higher prices: A worker covers the exterior of a mall in Beijing with a poster. China’s consumer price index rose 2.5% in September from a year earlier, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics. — Reuters
Higher prices: A worker covers the exterior of a mall in Beijing with a poster. China’s consumer price index rose 2.5% in September from a year earlier, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia