• pelerinli@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Right is possible if economy is local. Left is actual real life because of capitalism needs bigger markets in in small areas for maximing profits.

      • mondoman712@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        You can’t have bigger markets in smaller areas with cars because the cars take up so much space. Public transport gives access while still allowing for density, which provides a much larger market. The only ones losing out are the auto makers and oil companies.

      • Xenxs@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        Don’t bother mate, the people in this community don’t live in reality.

      • chatokun@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        11 months ago

        I live in GA outside of Atlanta and rent is already tough. I’ve been to cities with not exactly amazing but serviceable public transportation (various parts of greater NYC and Chicago) and loved them. I’ve tried to use busses elsewhere, though it often meant 3 hours wasted to go to work, with similar time wasted after (hourly buss schedules and multiple transfers).

        I have an electric car now, work from home, and try to avoid having to drive much, but there isn’t much more I can afford to do atm. An bike would be nice but even that’ll take money I’m still recovering, and some places I go to even just a couple times a month has no public transportation. I’d love if it did, but I have to use EV for now.

        • n2burns@lemmy.ca
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          11 months ago

          I think when most people decry EVs, we’re not talking about individual EV owners but the system which forces basically everyone to move around by personal vehicle. Sure, they’ll be the occasional person who says, “I bike 28km to and from work at a very physical job where I often work overtime. I have to share the road with traffic. I don’t know why everyone can’t commute by bike,” (this was the gist of a comment I read on reddit years ago). However, most people understand that changes can’t just be personal responsibility.

          With the information we have about your life, it sounds like you made a reasonable decision. If you can continue to be mindful about the decisions you make and advocate for a better world when you can, I think you’re doing a great job!

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          When we lived in L.A., we were near a train station. My wife sometimes took the train to work and sometimes drove. Even in L.A. traffic, it took her half the time to get to work by car because of how far away we lived from where she worked. It really sucked, but that was the reality. She had to get up at 4:30 am to take the train and 6 am to drive. She did carpool, which is better than driving alone, but it’s hard to convince people to get away from cars if you have to make sacrifices to your day like that.

    • 420stalin69 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      Not really. At all. Like they’re barely even a bandaid.

      The issue is a car weighs a couple of tons and it’s being used to move a person who weighs around 100kg.

      It’s massively inefficient use of energy.

      Even in some fantasy world where the energy used to charge the batteries is all renewable - not even close to reality but let’s pretend - all that lithium and other precious earths are still an environmental disaster.

      The answer is mass transit and lower mass vehicles. A lifestyle change is actually required and the thing is it wouldn’t even make people less happy, just that change is so fucking scary for some reason.

      Walkable cities are a dream lifestyle and an electric scooter in a walkable city is outstanding. Fuck urban sprawl.

      • BestBouclettes@jlai.lu
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        11 months ago

        EVs are not limited to personal vehicles though. I absolutely agree on developing mass transit, be it rail or other, and preventing urban sprawl.

        But cars (personal vehicles) and other vehicles will always exist (at least for the foreseeable future) and people will still need to haul stuff (garbage collection, artisans, deliveries, movers etc…).

        I’d take an electric garbage collection truck over a ICE one for instance. It’s anecdotal but there are roadworks in my neighborhood, and most of the machinery is electric which is very nice. Electric mopeds/motorcycles are also much quieter than ICE ones. You could also electrify buses, airport equipment, port equipment, trains (the diesel ones), mining equipment, etc.

        So no, EVs are not the solution but a solution, and their development is a good thing if we want to move away from fossil fuels.

        Edit: corrected thermic with ICE

        • 420stalin69 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          11 months ago

          Yeah ok that’s fair, even in a transformed world there is still a need for some cars you’re right.

          My point was more that a world in which we simply exchange fords for Tesla’s is still a fucked world but you make a fair counter point.

            • sysgen [none/use name,they/them]@hexbear.net
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              11 months ago

              Investing trillions of dollars into dead ends is, however, the enemy of progress. The ressources we’re throwing at replacing existing cars with EV cars would be enough to implement better solutions.

              • ThunderclapSasquatch@startrek.website
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                11 months ago

                No technology is a dead end, you can’t run trains 30 miles out of town for 6 families already over 500 acres. Just because a technology doesn’t benefit urbanization doesn’t make it worthless.

                • sysgen [none/use name,they/them]@hexbear.net
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                  11 months ago

                  I’m not opposing the research, I’m opposing the implementation. Spending trillions of dollars because >1% of the population would be inconvenienced as you showed by having to use less developed or more expensive alternative is stupid.

      • Floon@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        Fuck urban rents, how about that?

        People who give this message like everyone is just choosing to screw the environment for fun make a crapton of assumptions about the forces people face in finding a place to live.

        • 7bicycles [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          11 months ago

          Fuck urban rents, how about that?

          Boy I wonder where we might be able to find lots and lots of space within a city for new construction to densify it.

        • CrushKillDestroySwag [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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          11 months ago

          The fun part is that many societies have had and currently have dirt cheap urban rents, accurately reflecting the efficiency and lower cost of supplying services to people in urban areas. This isn’t even a capitalism/socialism thing, since plenty of capitalist societies have figured out how to make it work via subsidies, public housing, price controls, etc.

          • Floon@lemmy.ml
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            11 months ago

            The plan to address that is via crapping on EVs?

            OK. Go for yourself.

            • CrushKillDestroySwag [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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              11 months ago

              I was just talking about urban rents. The fact of the matter is that climate change will not be addressed without significantly reducing the number of cars on the road, EVs or no, and you can’t do that without overhauling urban sprawl.

    • Iron Lynx@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      I’d call them less a solution, more an attempt at harm reduction.

      And the only things they’ll properly resolve are tailpipe emissions and idling noise. At least one of which is of no concern when dealing with the externalities of car traffic.

      If you really want to solve the environmental impact of transportation, you minimise the need for transportation. Put homes and workplaces close together, offer mass alternatives for the pairs where you really do need motorised mobility solutions, and minimise the number of situations where it’s more convenient to take a car. Ban on-street parking and heavily tax off-street parking. Need to park your car in the city? Hope you can afford to pay an arm and a leg. Oh, you can’t? Looks the Park & Ride at the train station two towns over is the nearest alternative. Don’t worry though, the trains go six times an hour and a day ticket is, like, four quid max.

      • qyron@sopuli.xyz
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        11 months ago

        […] Put homes and work locations close together […]

        The best hope for that to have marginal improvement is a move towards remote work, mostly feaseable for white collar activities.

        Anything else is constantly pushed outside and away from residential areas.

        I know a few stupid examples of very well planned and thought out industrial parks and long time industrial sites forced to vacate because residential were built 2 or 3km away and residents did not enjoy the movement going back and forward (not through the residential areas, mind that) of trucks and other machines or the sounds coming from a factory when the conditions were just right to carry it over the distance. Needless to say companies simply moved away or closed down activity and the previously complaining residential areas became high unemployment areas.

        It’s the same absurd reasoning behind people building houses in the middle of nowhere and then demanding power, water and communications connections.

      • Iceblade@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        They’ve done this to our city center. Last time I visited (half a year ago) most of the shops and restaurants had gone out of business and they’re contemplating turning the café/mall area into apartments.

        Meanwhile, during the same period of time, a huge car mall has started sprawling on the city edge. It’s a huge shame really. Used to be a very pleasant area to visit and walk around.

        Nowadays it’s either take the bus (30+ minutes once every half hour), the bike (30 minutes if the weather is ok and you work up a sweat) or hope there’s parking and pay exorbitant rates (10 minutes).

        I used to commute to work via public transit, until they put fees on the commuter parking by the train station as well. Slightly more expensive to drive all the way, but way faster (1/2 the time).

        So… yeah. The “fuck cars” attitude of my municipality turned me from someone who travels by foot, bike, bus, train and car into someone who travels almost exclusively by car. I need a car, the rest is optional.

        • ...m...@ttrpg.network
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          11 months ago

          …yeah, i tried the public transit thing for awhile and not only spent at least as much money but also increased my commute by four to six times: totally unsustainable, mostly due to anti-infrastructure politics…

          …wherever urban real estate is driven by speculative capitalism, walkable neighborhoods are a luxury reserved for the upper class…

      • Floon@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        Quid: you’re British. Great.

        You’re smaller in area than Texas. It’s a little easier for you to stay close to everything, you’re never more than 70 miles away from the sea.

        • ProgrammingSocks@pawb.social
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          11 months ago

          Hello, I’m Albertan. Stop saying this. Our governments maintain roads in between these cities every year, there is no reason they couldn’t have been train lines instead. Roads are far more expensive than many realize.

          Once upon a time, all cities were connected by train, and we ripped it all up to build roads instead. Sure, it’s going to cost money to build these up again – that’s what happens when we make a mistake, we have to pay for it in one way or another. But connecting smaller towns and cities is not the herculean impossible task that people seem to want to pretend it is.

          There ARE major urban areas in North America. People are not evenly spread out across the landmass equally. Connecting these first is obviously the goal, because that will take care of 70% of the problem already. And always remember not to make perfect the enemy of good - even if we stopped there we’d be in infinitely better shape than we were before.

          • Floon@lemmy.ml
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            11 months ago

            We’ve done a ton of that. The Acela is great, I’ve ridden it a bunch. But that kind of thing doesn’t scale as efficiently as you would hope. It can serve corridors of people, but not huge continents of hundreds of millions all that well. There are to many places to be.

        • hglman@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          How odd, russia has plenty of walkable cities in the largest country on earth.

        • Iron Lynx@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Look mate, if you’re going to shove the “tHe stATeS arE ToO bIG, thus wE cANNot SOlvE The transIt ProbleM” rhetoric on us, please find another place to wallow in your lack of trains while assuming car industry rhetoric as undeniable fact.

          Also, your claim has been debunked and reclarified so often that I’m not going to begin to explain just how wrong you are.

          • Floon@lemmy.ml
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            11 months ago

            You guys are all idiots. A bunch of Europeans lucked into an infrastructure that works with twice the people in half the space, and you act like it was an intentional and smarter design decision in anticipation of a climate crisis. You shipped your most insane people off your continent to become Americans, and their shitty Calvinism has made everything that has always been terrible about Northern Europe even worse.

            Now you want to act like anyone who thinks what you propose isn’t exactly easy (or democratic) is some kind of corporate fascist. Fuck off, the lot of you.

    • rustydrd@sh.itjust.works
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      11 months ago

      Solution to what though? Emissions are reduced but not eliminated: when accounting for greenhouse gases emitted during production, EVs start outperforming traditional cars only after 5+ years of use (depending on the type of car). And other factors like tyre dust and road maintenance (due to EVs’ higher weight) or resources needed to replace/recycle old batteries are not even included in that balance.

      EVs might still be a net positive when compared with traditional cars, but both pale in comparison to public transport and infrastructure oriented towards bikes and pedestrians.

      • hperrin@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        That’s really only because most of our electricity is still produced through fossil fuels. As we move to renewables, that equation will shift rapidly toward net positive much before 5 years. And that’s not accounting for any technological advances (like sodium ion batteries) that happen in that time.

        • rustydrd@sh.itjust.works
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          11 months ago

          The 5 year figure is from a German study and is based on the German energy mix (which is indeed quite dirty). So yeah, that number will hopefully decrease. But even with that, the “up-front” emissions in EV production are a major issue that is tough to solve and rarely made transparent by EV manufacturers.

          • dubyakay@lemmy.ca
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            11 months ago

            What’s the upfront emission of EV production that makes it that much of a detriment compared to ICE production?

            • rustydrd@sh.itjust.works
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              11 months ago

              The main source is battery production and related to the mining and refinement of their raw materials (source, source). The exact emissions are hard to quantify. That being said, the lifetime emissions of battery EVs are still significantly lower, so it’s still a net benefit. For a bigger picture, you can check the references here and here.

        • Floon@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          US energy is 40% renewable already. Solar is the fastest growing energy segment.

          In my county, our electricity is 2/3 sourced from hydropower, so an EV has significant impact on emissions relative to an ICE car.

    • hex_m_hell@slrpnk.net
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      11 months ago

      I don’t think they’re even a solution. They’re just another scam like hydrogen fuel cells were. They exist to keep people from pushing for the real change we actually need… Just like the decade we lost because people bought the hydrogen fuel cell grift last time.

  • Moonrise2473@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago

    The problem is people got the idea that they need a 3 ton truck to do grocery shopping

    • MalachaiConstant@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Sure maybe a mega SUV as a daily driver is not right for everyone, but I just can’t live without the extra leg room and riot protection!

      • Droechai@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        Riot control vehicle lpt :If you just fill the water cannon tank to half full instead of topping up you save quite a lot over time due to reduced litre/km consumption

    • Cerise_W@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Emission laws made big trucks easier to produce than small trucks in the US, I miss the days of the short bed pickup. Still like my 98 taco and use it for hauling hay.

      • Moonrise2473@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        My supermarket does this: if you go shopping with public transport, then you can ask the cashier to have someone deliver the just purchased groceries to your house for 5 euro

      • thoughts3rased@sopuli.xyz
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        11 months ago

        Not really, if you’re doing your weekly shop all in one go (especially for a family), it can make sense that your weekly shop can be more than you can carry and thus you need something to help you carry it. I wouldn’t want to lug 4-5 bags of shopping onto a bus where I’m going to piss someone off because I placed them on the seat, nor do I want to try to balance all that on the handlebars of a bike where a single fuckup or pothole I can’t see will lose me lots of money in shopping.

        I don’t personally do those sorts of large shops, but people are busy and literally schedule this in their week so it’s not insane.

        Or hey, maybe more people could shop online? With well planned routes it could be more efficient than lots of people all travelling to one place.

        • mondoman712@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          If you live in a dense area with more local shops, you’ll probably be doing more frequent, smaller shops throughout the week.

        • Elise@beehaw.org
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          11 months ago

          What about one of those carts you can hook up to your bike? I asked around once and heard it can carry 50 kg.

    • Elise@beehaw.org
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      11 months ago

      I used to have this handcart and it could easily carry enough groceries for 3 people for 1 week. We’d put stuff directly inside at the counter and then empty it in the kitchen, then fold it up for storage. It was maybe 100 euros? And of course you could also use it for picnics or shopping for other things.

      For heavy stuff we’d use delivery or a lasttaxi. Basically a taxi for carrying heavier things.

    • jabathekek@sopuli.xyz
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      11 months ago

      Oh man, waiting an hour or so for a bus in -30℃ weather is great. Then the bus is inevitably late because it’s Edmonton (where public transit doesn’t seem to get public funding) and you get to enjoy the great outdoors for another thirty minutes. I’m surprised I still have my toes…

      I’m so glad my parents gave me their old truck so I don’t really have to deal with that shit any more.

    • mondoman712@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      The problem with electric cars is that they’re a distraction. They make people think they’re part of the solution when they’re only partly addressing one of the many problems cars cause. I’m not against people buying them assuming that they’re in a position where they need a new car, but advocating for electric cars as a solution is wrong. I read the OP like this, not how you read it.

    • HenriVolney@sh.itjust.works
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      11 months ago

      I agree this kind of post may play in favour of ICE manufacturers and oil companies but I disagree with the comparison you make between EVs and tobacco patches. EVs are produced and sold in order to replace ICEs in the exact same segment. They do not impact peoples lives significantly and will not change anything in the way cities and activities work now. The example you give is the epitome of a work/life organization which was only made possible by the massification of individual motorized transportation, with all the negative externalities listed in the OP. Yes individual cars are going to be needed for many reasons in the future. But we need to work collectively to make them less convenient and less needed in everyday life.

    • TimewornTraveler@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      oh buzz off with your weird essay filled with jabs and fallacies and bad faith. actually I just reread it and I have to ask: what the fuck is wrong with you? you’re acting like a white guy who hears two black people talking about racism and leaps in to say “stop calling me racist!” you think this post is calling you out? what the actual fuck is wrong with you?

      NO ONE IS SAYING YOU ARE PERSONALLY MORALLY WRONG FOR DRIVING A CAR TODAY IN 2024

      that’s the whole fucking gist of this entire guy’s essay, folks. he thinks criticizing EVs is a personal attack on him and people who don’t currently live in walkable cities

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            So the entire metric for ‘shithole’ to you is based on how many people ride electrified trains? Really? Nothing about, say, their economy or their standard of living or their record on human rights or anything like that?

              • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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                11 months ago

                No? Where did I say this?

                You implied it when you suggested, to my reply that Canada might not be a shithole country, that it was due to the whole train thing.

                Right, because they’re doing so well on that front…

                https://globalnews.ca/news/7920118/indigenous-women-sterilization-senate-report/

                And the country with the flawless human rights record is what? Iceland because there’s no one to oppress since everyone’s related to everyone else? Great. The rest of 200-some other countries are shitholes by that measure. Again, not the best metric.

                Let’s talk about your country now. Where do you live? Will you even volunteer that information?

  • thatsTheCatch@lemmy.nz
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    11 months ago

    I heard a good saying the other day: “Electric cars are a solution for the car industry.” Give me walkable cities please

    • Xenxs@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      I live in Scandinavia, in one of these walkable cities. Everyone has a car. Why? Because relying on public transport or walking/biking everywhere is not practical. It’s just reality.

      • thatsTheCatch@lemmy.nz
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        11 months ago

        That’s fair enough. I also own a car, but I try to use alternative means of transport (bus, bike, walk, skateboard) whenever possible. It’s the prioritisation of cars over all other modes of transport where I have the issue. My city is riddled with car filled streets criss-crossing all over. There’s a plan to take one of the most shop focused streets and make it walkable. It would mean that I would be able to get to work almost the whole way on it. I hope it goes through

        • Xenxs@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago

          I’m not disagreeing with you or most people here for being annoyed by everything being build around car usage. I just don’t see it realistically change. You’d have to rebuild most cities from the ground up and invest ungodly amounts of money into several modes of public transport in every city. It just won’t happen.

          I’ve had to use public transport to get to a job I loved in a neighbouring city, due to not having a car at that point. Where a drive with the car would have taken me about 20 minutes one way, the bus+train combo I was forced to use was 1,5 hours including waiting times. It was so draining that I quit that job after 6 months.

          If this is the choice you need to make, people will take that car every time because you can’t rely on jobs being available within 20 minutes of walking or public transport, most cities aren’t build to offer jobs+housing+shopping within a small radius for all the people living there.

          • thatsTheCatch@lemmy.nz
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            11 months ago

            The part about going to your job is totally valid. Some jobs can be worked remotely or partly remotely now, but that doesn’t apply to all professions, so that is something to keep in mind.

            In terms of not being able to realistically change the current cities, many of the best walkable cities prioritized cars first and then changed. It took decades, but they eventually achieved it.

            There’s this presentation I found after doing some research on the 15-minute cities conspiracy theory, and it was a really interesting talk about how towns and cities can be changed into slower, more accessible ones. It’s an hour long but there’s a 5 minute segment where it discusses cases where cities have changed from car-based to a more walkable one, in this case Amsterdam and Pontevedra (in Spain).

            I recommend checking it out. Here’s a link with the timestamp of the start of the section about those cities:

            Dr Rodney Tolley: Fast Speed, Slow Cities

            In the section before this one, he discusses the cost of other transport modes versus cars. Building and maintaining infrastructure for cars is waaaaay more expensive than for other methods, so cost isn’t an issue. I’ve included the slide below.

            Image of a side from the presentation linked above comparing the cost of car infrastructure versus other infrastructure. It's too full of text for an alt text so I recommend watching the presentation

  • Naz@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    Disagree on inefficient.

    Internal combustion engines in standard small size convert 19.65-22.1% of their energy from thermal to kinetic.

    The ratio of electron throughput from battery to electric motor can be as LOW as 88% but hovers between 92-98% efficiency.

    Even if you had a fuel cell in the back, running electric motors quintuples (5×) the standard energy efficiency owing to the principle of energy quality type preservation in conversion (High to High vs Low to High):

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_transformation

    So 1 electric car = 4 less carbon liquid fuelled cars worth of pollution.

    What you’re actually looking for is:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jevons_paradox

    Jevon’s Paradox states that improved efficiency of something will only increase its use, and in this case, electric cars will in fact, correlate to car use, and increased mineral demands.

    This is a problem you cannot solve endemic to humanity.

    • Faresh@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      I think the point is that compared to public transport when transporting a large number of people, they are inefficient.

    • Nobilmantis@feddit.it
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      I think you missed the meaning of inefficency on this matter…

      While it is undeniable that electric cars have a better supply-to-engine energy efficency than combustion cars, you can understand that they are equiparated in the meme as “equally bad” if you think outside of the box labelled “rubber wheels on high friction asphalt transporting usually a single individual”.

      Compare that with a tram or a train, transporting multiple passengers with the same electric engine but also steel-on-steel friction on the wheels and the difference between an ICE and EV vehicle becomes a mere approximation error; god I can do the math for you if you want, but I bet even a disel bus with a lot of passengers has a better efficency/passenger ratio than an EV.

      So 1 electric car = 4 less carbon liquid fuelled cars worth of pollution.

      Also I think this is a bit misleading: if I buy an EV this won’t magically destroy 4 (where is this number from?) already existing carbon liquid cars, it merely means you avoided adding 1 other ICE car to the total.

      • eluvinar@szmer.info
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        11 months ago

        box labelled “rubber wheels on high friction asphalt transporting usually a single individual”.

        so, a box I keep my bike in? :D

    • Ummdustry@sh.itjust.works
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      I mean, Jevon’s Paradox works because the increased efficiency leads to decreased costs. It’s unclear if that’s going to be the case for electric cars because the hardware needed to get to that high efficiency is so expensive, and mostly made cost-effective by government assistance (I.e. eletric cars here in the UK do not pay road tax).

      I’m also not sure if lowered costs would massively change the number of drivers (at least in the developed world) in the EU there’s one car for every two people. We’re not going to see that become 5 cars for every two people just because the efficiency increases, demand is too inelastic.

  • Floon@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago

    This is why people hate liberals, and why liberals often migrate over to conservatism: no matter how right you are, there’s always someone happy to crap on you for not being right enough.

    Don’t shit on EVs for merely being one of many solutions that all need to be engaged with. It’s not like without EVs, so many people would be rushing to areas of greater density and riding public transit, so your message is not helpful in achieving what you want, and actively angers your allies.

    • セリャスト@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      11 months ago

      Ah yes conservatism, the famous side of rational thinking and anti-bias thoughts, such as avoiding the perfect solution bias
      Your comment having so many upvotes is disgusting

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      11 months ago

      The thing is you’re just not right. EVs serve to save the car, not the world.

      It’s not like without EVs, so many people would be rushing to areas of greater density and riding public transit, so your message

      Correct! Which is why you should fight cars in general, cause then that happens

    • TheLastHero [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      Don’t take it so personally. sure EVs have a role to play but if we’re to be serious about tackling climate change and environmental sustainability it’s going to require massive infrastructure redevelopment projects, not asking everyone to please swap to rechargeable batteries. It’s not about being “right enough” it’s about recognizing a non-solution and also on a policy level a blatant scam. All these EV subsides the liberal Biden administration is throwing out are an obvious hand out to the failing American auto industry to try to keep them competitive and desperate ploy to their quickly dwindling supporters for them to look like they’re doing anything worthwhile on climate change at all.

      Having every American buy a new electric car is just going to make a few auto executives rich as hell and not even reduce overall global emissions because those cheaper ICE cars that can’t be sold in America are just going to go to other parts of the world that don’t have EV infrastructure but have plenty of already existing gas stations. And there’s all the emissions of actually building the damn things. No, they need to put their money where their mouth is and build some fucking trains.

      • Floon@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        I’m not taking it personally: hyper-progressive policies that require achievements in infrastructure change orders of magnitude more costly and complicated than any other event in human history described as “just something folks have to do” as if it’s that easy, as if they’re not just happening because of half a dozen car company CEOs… they just make me queasy that you’re an ally of mine in our desire to fight global warming.

        • Sopje [comrade/them, she/her]@hexbear.net
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          Lmao you are not an ally in fighting global warming if you don’t support major changes in infrastructure. You are taking this way too personally, you’re in a fuck_cars community crying about how we shouldn’t be mean about cars.

          You can agree that EV’s are a non-solution while still accepting that you live in a place that’s so fucked up that it doesn’t provide you with an alternative.

          • Floon@lemmy.ml
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            11 months ago

            No, I’m saying that removed about EVs does what, exactly? The infrastructure change you’re glib about happens how? You haven’t even thought of that. You have a goal, but no map from here to there. You’re still stuck at the fuck cars stage it seems.

            Try to actually solve the problem instead of removed about incremental solutions that don’t do enough for your taste.

    • barrbaric [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago
      1. Do you realize what comm you’re in?

      2. If pointing out that EVs aren’t a real solution is enough to alienate those “allies” they weren’t really allies at all. It’s also less about individual choice to move to areas with better transit, and more about pressuring the government to install better transit everywhere instead of just funneling endless money to car manufacturers.

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      11 months ago

      I think both sides are lacking nuance here. If you shit on people getting electric vehicles or just thinking of getting one because that’s not far enough: fuck you. But also, for people that just switched or are thinking of getting one but then see something like this and slam into reverse and say “I’m gonna support ICE cars till the day I die to spite those overly hostile woke liberals”: fuck you too.

      People should be able to take the information in a more nuanced way, and should stop swinging from extreme to extreme which has led to the current fucked state of politics

      • Floon@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        Plenty of people said if Bernie wasn’t the nominee, they’d vote Trump. Puzzle that one.

    • axont [she/her, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      EVs aren’t a solution to anything except as a way to trick people into thinking purchasing a car is saving the environment or helping fix society.

      If liberals are so shallow that they adopt racism because someone was mean to them online, then I’m glad they’re being more honest. The message is that cars, all cars, are something worth fighting against. Electric cars are not a step in the right direction, they’re not even a bandaid. They’re just something liberals can purchase to make them feel like they’re helping something. They’re toys.

      Honestly I would rather if most liberals outright come out as conservative, because it sounds like they’re on the line already. It would be more honest of them.

      • BehindTheBarrier@programming.dev
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        11 months ago

        Adopting EVs is an important step imo. The primary achievement of going EV is reducing oil/gas use. Moving away from cars as a society is a separate goal that can happen alongside this. We can never make gas green, at best net zero. EVs on the other hand can be better, with electricity from renewable sources, to batteries made with better materials. Both things which are happening and actively being researched.

        So we can make EVs much better environmentally, and reduce gas demand significantly alongside reducing car use. Because we won’t just stop needing gas magically, so replacing that is important for any transition away from it in the grand scheme.

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          Yeah I just don’t see it. If we want to reduce oil/gas use then the goal would be eliminating private car use altogether and providing alternatives. EVs are still a huge machine designed to transport a single person. They’re still a waste, not to mention how much the global south is getting exploited for their lithium.

          Cars just aren’t going to save anything. Here, I’ll compromise. Electric bicycles.

          • bufalo1973@lemmy.ml
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            11 months ago

            For city use I agree with you but if you live in a small town you need a car. You are too far from almost everything you need. And you don’t have public transport.

              • bufalo1973@lemmy.ml
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                11 months ago

                If you live in a little town in the middle of nowhere you won’t have public transport. It’s too expensive. Private transport it’s the only way to go anywhere from there. It’s a shame but…

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        11 months ago

        You are… not as thoughtful about issues you care about as you think you are.

        • axont [she/her, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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          Yeah, I’m an angry ball of rage because I live in a white supremacist hellscape where everyone is too smug or too tired to care. I don’t have any thoughts remaining other than the word fuck. The pretense of being thoughtful is a facade. My true self wants to roll in mud and scream obscenities at anyone I think looks too wealthy.

      • Floon@lemmy.ml
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        Fuck cars?

        I hate ignorant conservatives, but you mostly can’t do much about them because they listen to no one. But progressive ignorance is something I feel compelled to correct: progressives pretend to care about things other than their own assholes.

    • Furbag@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Oh no, some liberals were being mean to me on the internet. Guess I’ll just vote against my own interests to spite them…

      • MalachaiConstant@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        This is how a lot of people vote. Maybe they aren’t converted right then and there, but it builds up over time. Humans aren’t rational man

        • Furbag@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          I don’t doubt that that’s the case, but I’m just pointing out (humorously) the absurdity of someone who is purportedly a principled individual who cares about things like climate change, civil/human rights, equality, bodily autonomy and most importantly democracy changing to the side that is openly against all of those things because people can be harsh and nasty on the internet sometimes.

          Like, if someone really was so flimsy with their morals that they could bend so easily, did they ever really care in the first place? Or were they just looking for an excuse to blame the other side for their fecklessness?

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            You seem confused why people don’t want to agree with you politically when you’re being a dick to them.

            It must be some massive coincidence

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      I shit on liberals mostly because of their notions on ‘altruistic capitalism’. As soon as they purchase an EV, they think they’re out there saving the world and most don’t think critically past that.

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      I really have to agree that it’s posts like this that made me give up on left wing politics, in certainly not right wing but I see no hope for the left until fundermental problems are fixed which I don’t believe politics or media is capable of addressing.

      Further I am absolutely convinced a large portion of the loudest voices on climate change are so obsessed because they desperately want it to be the big doom that fucks up all the impressive things other people are achieving.

        • Meowoem@sh.itjust.works
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          Yes that’s exactly what I said and exactly everything that went into my thinking, congratulations you’re exactly the sort of binary thinking ideolog that makes any sort of political progress impossible on the left.

            • Meowoem@sh.itjust.works
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              11 months ago

              Again you’re just yelling slogans that have nothing to do with what I said because you’re absolutely incapable of having a reasonable conversation on anything of substance. This is a perfect example of what we’re talking about.

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    11 months ago

    Like, I get your overall point, but the whiskey to wine comparison doesn’t quite work lol.

    For starters, you’d have to drink a LOT more wine comparatively, which doesn’t translate when going from ICE to electric.

    • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      It does, because the batteries for electric cars have a reliance on rare earth metals.

      Lol the downvotes are hilarious. We will not solve climate change with electric cars. Public transit in walkable communities with niche uses for cars and trucks are the only way forward.

        • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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          As seen in the Wikipedia article, sodium ion batteries also require rare earth metal anodes, or toxic materials like mercury which is also bad. Better than lithium ion, but still generally not great. The best option would be aluminum air batteries, which should be easily accessible and are extremely recyclable

      • vividspecter@lemm.ee
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        The battery tech is starting to move away from rare earth, with LFP not using cobalt and sodium-ion not using lithium. And in any case, emissions are by far our most pressing problem compared to issues with rare earth extraction.

        • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          perhaps you’d be interested in the fact that I grew up in a very rural area. The nearest city was Rochester, MN, roughly 30 minutes away if you were going 70 in the 55 on US 52. I agree that rural areas will need cars to go from their houses to towns and cities, but I’ve thought extensively about public transit in rural areas, and I think it’s far easier than folks think.

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    11 months ago

    Just remember, the argument relies on not just getting rid of cars, but drastically improving public transport.

    World peace is more likely given government attitudes towards public services!

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    11 months ago

    some of these problems are actually worse with electric cars, namely tire and brake dust, since EVs are heavier than similar size/performance ICE cars

  • foreverandaday@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago
          ice car  |  electric car  
    

    train?          ❌️              |                ❌️
    simple as.

    • radiofreeval [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      Diesel trains are much more environmentally friendly than EVs. Diesel emissions become less of a problem when one engine carries hundreds of people. And diesel doesn’t even pretend to be good for the environment.

  • biddy@feddit.nl
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    11 months ago

    Disagree on noise. Electric cars are quieter when going slowly and the main noise is engine, but louder when going fast and the main noise is tires.

    • EldritchFeminity@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      In fact, low speed electric cars are quiet enough that they’ve considered putting speakers in them to alert pedestrians and make the absence of feedback less disconcerting for drivers.

      We’re so used to ICE cars that they’ve contemplated making electric cars pretend that they have an ICE.

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        11 months ago

        They already do this in Europe and other countries where mixed car/pedestrian environments are more common. Electric cars must have some form of audible signature, usually a quiet whirring sound.

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    11 months ago

    They’re still just as noisy above 30 km an hour due to air displacement and tire on the road.

    • hperrin@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Depending on the ICE car, a similar EV can actually be more noisy, because of the heavy battery causing more road friction = more noise.

      • omgarm@feddit.nl
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        11 months ago

        This is what I’ve learned the past year during my general acoustics course. Over 50 km/h EVs produce more sound.

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    11 months ago

    I really think we’re too far in the hole here.

    I think fear grips people at every angle and none of us are brave enough to accept bold action for positive change in our society. It seems like most people are just retracting instead.

    I vaguely remember that “Ye” (formerly Kanye West) once said something like he formed a think tank to build a city but the thing stopping his team was that “Ye” didn’t understand any of the concepts and he ran it into the ground.

    I want public transportation, I think everyone wants it at this point but no no one understands why we need it. They all just want to escape.

    (This message was brought to you by the new 2024 Ford Escape: just hit the road and escape to paradise)

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      11 months ago

      I like my car. Nothing will change that opinion, because nothing beats having a personal vehicle.

      • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        There’s no comparison to the personal freedom of having a car versus being dependent on others to ferry you around. That’s why America will always be built around our great car infrastructure. We will never give up our freedom to roam our huge awesome land.

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          11 months ago

          Nothing like freedom like actively removing people from having multiple choices of transit by making illegal to build anything that isn’t dependent on cars.

          Nothing like freedom like being forced to spend thousands on a several ton machine to do any task outside your home.

          Nothing like freedon like being forced to pay predatory insurance to private corporations in order to be legally allowed to drive your vehicle.

          Nothing like freedom like being dependent on oil companies that actively lobby against you in order to drive the vehicle that you are forced to own.

          Nothing like freedom like having infustructure that denies poor people and disabled people from participating in society.

          Nothing like freedom like having no independence if you are too old, too young, too intoxicated, or too disabled to drive.

          Nothing like freedom like being forced to have a license issued by your government in order to be independent.

          Nothing like freedom like being forced to use a vehicle that spies on you and collects information such as your sexual activity, immigration status, ‘private’ conversations, location, and much more.

              • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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                11 months ago

                And here again we see the typical attempt to put words in somebody’s mouth. I never said anything about what poor people deserve, that’s your words, not mine.

                When you don’t have a substantial rebuttal, you just make up a strawman argument.

                IMO everyone, regardless of economic stature, deserves every form of freedom legitimately available in society. For this example, if a poor person couldn’t afford a car I would suggest a cheap used motorcycle. I’ve bought a couple of those, one was $900 and the other was $2500.

                • Franklin@lemmy.world
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                  11 months ago

                  This is incredibly insane when you consider the cost incurred to maintain a vehicle. No poor person would do this in the right mind it would be nothing but a debt trap. It’s shameful that public transit is downright near illegal and most metropolitan areas in North America and it is the best solution get over it

        • mondoman712@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          I would argue that a fast, frequent and comprehensive public transport system gives you more personal freedom. Being able to easily get around without having to worry about piloting a heavy vehicle, without the burden of maintenance, and being flexible once out due to not needing to worry about where you’re storing your car. Plug the gaps with (electric and/or cargo) bikes for shorter trips and car share for longer ones and you have a much better, more equitable transport system.

          • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            All public transport vehicles are heavier than my personal vehicle though. Also public transport doesn’t provide the freedom of choosing any destination that you want, and taking yourself there on your own schedule. That’s what I was talking about.

            • mondoman712@lemmy.ml
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              11 months ago

              You aren’t piloting a public transport vehicle, a professional is and you are free to not worry about it.

              A frequent and comprehensive public transport system does allow for that freedom, without all of the burdens of car ownership. Bikes and car share can be used to fill in the gaps when the public transport isn’t comprehensive enough.

    • HiddenLayer5@lemmy.mlOP
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      11 months ago

      I live in Vancouver and our transit agency is seriously considering ripping the trolleybus lines out. Just like how they ripped the streetcars out before the trolleybuses came and then shamelessly told us that it’s too expensive to reinstall the tracks so we’re just never getting it back. In both cases it was because “it’s getting too expensive to maintain” after they deferred maintenance for ages so everything is falling apart and the small problems got compounded into showstoppers from neglect.

      • SaniFlush [any, any]@hexbear.net
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        11 months ago

        The typical conservative tactic of creating a problem to justify not funding a public service. Can we directly call them out on it?