The Mail on Sunday

Why electric cars are not so pure – and your emails are even worse

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●Hybrid and electric cars can contain 20 to 25lb of rare earth metals (twice the amount in petrol vehicles).

● China is the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases (28 per cent of the total in 2015). Ten per cent of its arable land is contaminat­ed by heavy metals; 80 per cent of its ground water is unfit for consumptio­n.

●To make just one solar panel generates up to 70kg of carbon dioxide.

● The expected increase in the number of solar panels will generate 2.7 billion tons of carbon emissions – the same as 600,000 vehicles on the road in a year.

● Manufactur­ing an electric car requires far more energy than a convention­al car due to its lithium-ion battery. The one used on Tesla’s Model S, left, is 1,199lb (544kg), 25 per cent of the car’s weight. Every year, the electronic­s industry consumes 320 tons of gold and 7,500 tons of silver. Also, it accounts for 22 per cent of global mercury consumptio­n. ● The manufactur­e of laptops and mobile phones uses 19 per cent of global production of rare metals such as palladium, and 23 per cent of cobalt.

● An email with an attachment uses as much electricit­y as a high-wattage energysavi­ng light bulb does in one hour. Every hour, ten billion emails are sent – equivalent output of 15 nuclear power stations for an hour.

● The informatio­n and communicat­ion technology sector consumes ten per cent of the world’s electricit­y, producing 50 per cent more greenhouse gases than air transport in a year.

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