Las Vegas Review-Journal

Electric revolution on verge of disrupting transporta­tion

- Llewellyn King

Connie Francis sang about “Where the Boys Are” in 1961. Well, today’s bright boys and girls are flooding into transporta­tion. It is the place of cutting-edge invention — not cell phones, they were so last year; not computers, they were, er, so last century. The smartest college and university graduates may well find the adventure of creating in transporta­tion.

A science-led revolution is in the making in transporta­tion. Leading this revolution is the electric car. It is no longer a drawing-board dream: It is here and gaining market share, albeit minuscule at present.

The surge to electric-powered transporta­tion goes beyond the Tesla and Elon Musk — although Musk has been a catalyst. All manufactur­ers are now making or investigat­ing electric cars. But the electric car is only a beginning: buses, trucks, trains, boats, ships and even airplanes are in the mix.

China is throwing government and private resources into an electric future. France, Britain and eight other countries have declared that they will ban the internal combustion engine by mid-century. Volvo has said that it will stop making fossil fuel-powered cars.

At the extreme end of the electric car excitement are automated vehicles. These have caught the imaginatio­n — and the dollars — of Google and Uber. But Detroit is also is coming to realize that it has to go electric. General Motors has paved its way with the EV1 and the Volt; others are scrambling.

The political pressure behind the urge to go electric is clean air, reduced noise and, for many countries, the end of a huge oil bill.

One hundred forty years after Thomas Edison first perfected a light bulb, electricit­y is once again a major disruptive technology — and not just on the surface of the Earth. Electric aircraft are in design with short-haul, small-load passenger versions flying in Dubai. Mighty Boeing has teamed up with innovative Jetblue to work on electric-powered aircraft, although these might have to wait for much better electric-storage batteries than now exist.

Naysayers are quick to point up the inadequacy of batteries — lithium ion are the workhorses in this revolution — and the difficulty of charging them.

These arguments point to a fork in the road for electric enthusiast­s: Will the future depend on today’s charging technology, where a car has to be tethered to the charging apparatus by a wire, or will electromag­netic fields be used in inductive charging, eliminatin­g the wire? This is known as Wireless Power Transfer.

Enthusiast­s see WPT charging in two ways: either a plate set in a driveway or parking lot with the vehicle at rest, or a strip in a roadway that can charge vehicles in motion — a grander idea. If the latter is successful, it opens the way to smaller batteries in lighter vehicles, cheaper trucking.

The disruption is going to be very large.

Gasoline stations would largely disappear or be very few. Automobile technician­s might want to look for alternativ­e employment, as will, eventually, many truck drivers.

The search for new batteries is frenetic and internatio­nal. New, longer-lived batteries will, in large measure, determine the rate of growth in the more advanced electric vehicle applicatio­ns.

Another big imponderab­le is who will provide the electricit­y? There is a general assumption in the electric utilities that they will do this. But will they? The new owners of the charging networks may choose to make their own with wind, solar and small modular nuclear reactors.

What will the role of government be? Local government will have to deal with the road-use issues. But what of the federal government? It has always been involved in transport.

As Peter Morici, the economist and columnist, points out, it stimulated the railways with right-of-way grants and the airlines with mail-hauling contracts. Will it find a similarly elegant way to stimulate the flow of electrons into transporta­tion, and a whole new way of getting ourselves and our stuff around? Maybe it will be led by the military: the Navy wants electric ships.

No wonder the best minds out of colleges and universiti­es are getting wanderlust.

Llewellyn King is executive producer and host of “White House Chronicle” on PBS. He wrote this for Insidesour­ces.com.

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