TECH TORQUE: FRASER STRONACH
IF YOU have been paying attention, and I’m sure some of you do, you would have seen a report that Toyota Australia’s sales and marketing supremo Sean Hanley has issued a word of caution regarding the push for the faster take-up of electric vehicles. His words were a rare, sensible and reasoned voice in a discussion that’s often far from sensible or reasoned. See, the trouble is, EVS aren’t just a new automotive technology, they also represent an ideology that says cutting carbon emissions and hopefully limiting climate change is the most important thing on mankind’s agenda right now. And when it comes to ideological debate, the subtle detail is almost always lost.
Among other things, Hanley points out that charging EVS off an electricity grid relies in any part on fossil fuels (coal and gas) and all you’re doing is transferring emissions away from the car’s tailpipe to a fossil-fuel power station, a fact seemingly overlooked by the EV ideologues. Hanley notes that even by 2040 more than half of the world’s electricity is expected to be from fossil fuels. Right now in Australia the percentage is closer to 80 per cent nationally. The only benefit of moving carbon emissions away from the tailpipe to a remote power station is the cleaner air in built-up areas, where vehicle use is concentrated. To fully close the environmental loop with EVS we need a grid powered 100 per cent by renewables. Or bypass the grid by charging off home solar panels or via solar- or wind-powered public charging points.
It should be noted that Hanley’s caution comes off the back of Toyota unveiling its first fully battery-electric vehicle, the BZ4X (due 2022) and Toyota making petrol-electric hybrids for the better part of a quarter of a century.
The other problem that the EV protagonists miss, especially those in Australia, is that we simply don’t have sufficient grid power for a rapid and significant take-up of EVS. In fact, if everyone swapped their fossil-fuel cars to battery-electric cars tomorrow and charged them off the grid, Australia would need an electricity grid with around twice the power than it has now! As it is, it barely copes now at high-load periods.
There’s a huge amount of inertia in the auto industry and switching from fossil-fuel cars to EVS, either battery or hydrogen fuel cell, requires functional infrastructure to be built. And that will take time. A recent study in California, where EV take-up is far greater than here, showed that nearly 20 per cent of EV buyers want to go back to a fossil fuel car for their next purchase despite
California being well-served by charging stations. Disgruntled EV owners cited the inconvenience of the public charging infrastructure and the fact they didn’t have a suitable charging facility at home.
The lesson here for public EV charging is that charge stations set up like fuel stations will only work if you can charge an EV in a similar time that it takes to fill the fuel tank of a petrol or diesel car, and that isn’t going to happen any time soon. EV charging points need to be at places where you’re going to park and leave the car anyway: at home, at parking stations, at office car parks, at shopping centres, etc. Then the slow charging time isn’t an issue.
Unfortunately, all this will take clear forward planning, especially at local and state (and territory) government levels, and that may be too much to ask going on the previous dud decisions like approving Tesla charging stations where you can only charge a Tesla! Who would approve a conventional fuel station where you can only fill up one make of car? Please …
Making the whole EV take-up even more fraught with problems is the federal government is set to lose up to $12 billion a year in revenue that you and me provide, thanks to the 42.7c/lt levy we pay on petrol and diesel fuel. So expect to see more of the push and shove between the federal and state and territory governments, which we saw with COVID-19, as we stagger down the inevitable road to EV take-up.