The Guardian (USA)

Are electric cars too heavy for British roads, bridges and car parks?

- Jasper Jolly

Cars have a weight problem. Consider the Mini, designed to save precious fuel during rationing; it has ballooned in size. It is not alone. Cars have got bigger and bigger, with the rise of the SUV only accelerati­ng the trend.

Electric cars might look the same (for now) but they have one important difference: a heavy battery.

Our EV mythbuster­s series has taken a wild ride through the common (but often misinforme­d) criticisms of electric cars, from range anxiety to carbon emissions, mining and air pollution. This final instalment asks: will electric cars prove to be too heavy for our roads and infrastruc­ture?

The claim

After years of bloat on our roads, the extra battery burden has prompted some people to wonder if the advent of the electric car will break our roads, bridges and car parks.

Matthew Lynn, a columnist at the Daily Telegraph, this month wrote: “It’s far from clear that the charging infrastruc­ture will be in place, or whether roads and bridges will cope with the heavier vehicles.”

Greg Knight, a Conservati­ve MP, last year asked the UK government to test “the adequacy of the strength of multistore­y car parks and bridges at safely bearing the additional weight of electric vehicles”.

The Asphalt Industry Alliance has claimed that smaller roads could be vulnerable to increased pothole formation, and the Daily Mail wrote: “Multistore­y car parks could be at risk of collapsing.”

The science

Electric cars can be very heavy. Car magazine said General Motors’ gargantuan Hummer “manages to look even heavier than it is” – an impressive achievemen­t, considerin­g it comes in at more than four tonnes. A third of that is the battery pack capable of powering one of the biggest cars over 300 miles. It is big.

A more reasonable electric car would be the Tesla Model Y, at two tonnes. For comparison, Jaguar Land Rover’s Range Rover weighs in at 2.5 tonnes before any people get in, while newer versions of Ford’s F-150 pickup truck – the US bestseller – can weigh as much as 2.7 tonnes depending on the model.

Neverthele­ss, Transport & Environmen­t, a campaign group, calculates that EVs are on average between 300kg and 400kg heavier. For every 150km of range, it adds about 100kg of battery weight, said Lucien Mathieu, the cars director at the Brussels-based group.

Heavier vehicles mean there is more friction between tyres and road, and more stress on whatever is below the car. That means roads deteriorat­e quicker. Academics at the University of Edinburgh in 2022 calculated that there could be between 20% and 40% additional road wear – think potholes, the driver’s bane – associated with battery vehicles compared with internal

 ?? Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images ?? Cars have got bigger and bigger, with the rise of the SUV only accelerati­ng the trend.
Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images Cars have got bigger and bigger, with the rise of the SUV only accelerati­ng the trend.
 ?? Getty Images ?? A Tesla Model Y weighs two tonnes – less than a Range Rover or a Ford’s F-150 pickup truck. Photograph: Brendon Thorne/
Getty Images A Tesla Model Y weighs two tonnes – less than a Range Rover or a Ford’s F-150 pickup truck. Photograph: Brendon Thorne/

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