The Guardian (USA)

Electric cars are not perfect, but they are a good start

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Oliver Balch’s article on lithium extraction (The long read, 8 December) is an important reminder that any sort of economic boom for a certain material, unfortunat­ely, tends to result in a rush to the bottom for environmen­tal and ethical standards. Absolutely, pressure should be placed on manufactur­ers to clean up and shorten their supply chains.

However, given the urgency of decarbonis­ing and cleaning up our air, it’s also important to flag up double standards. Yes, some of the processes used in lithium extraction at the moment are environmen­tally destructiv­e, and better solutions are needed. But extraction of oil and gas has been environmen­tally horrific for over a century, going backwards in standards with tar sands and fracking.

Yes, elements used in some battery chemistrie­s (like cobalt) are associated with child labour and human rights abuses in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which is completely unacceptab­le. But oil has fuelled inequity, war and corruption in most places it has been discovered – and we’ve become shamefully accepting of that.

Yes, lithium is used in electric vehicles (EV) and grid storage. But it’s also in the mobile phones and laptops that many EV critics will use daily without question, while cobalt is required to remove sulphur from diesel. Lithium batteries can power cars for hundreds of thousands of miles before being reused for grid storage, then finally recycled (potentiall­y upwards of 91% of materials). Oil and gas, having taken millions of years to develop, are burned in an instant and the byproducts then spend further generation­s polluting our lungs and changing our climate. Jamie Adam Balbeggie, Perthshire

• Electric cars will not be driven around by the “eco-minded urbanites” mentioned in Oliver Balch’s article. On the contrary, most of the time they will be parked in residentia­l streets, outside the homes of eco-minded urbanites – a testimony to the sheer insanity of the private car, and an even more glaring reason why what we need is, in the words of Thea Riofrancos, “rational forms of transport” – such as trains, trams, e-buses, cycling and carsharing – and the infrastruc­ture to encourage them – instead of private cars.Jim Grozier Brighton, East Sussex

 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images ?? A lithium-ion battery cell is installed in a vehicle. These type of power sources ‘can power cars for hundreds of thousands of miles, before being reused for grid storage, then finally recycled,’ writes Jamie Adam.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images A lithium-ion battery cell is installed in a vehicle. These type of power sources ‘can power cars for hundreds of thousands of miles, before being reused for grid storage, then finally recycled,’ writes Jamie Adam.

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