MARGARET  WENTE
The shocking truth about  electric cars 
_MARGARET  WENTE_ 
(http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/margaret-wente/)  | _Columnist 
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>From Thursday's Globe  and Mail 
Published Thursday, Sep. 01, 2011


 
Wouldn’t you love to have an electric car? They’re clean, green and  
righteous. And once we make the switch, we can pull the plug on fossil fuels,  
air pollution, imported oil and Middle Eastern autocrats, and create millions 
of  green jobs into the bargain. 
No wonder progressive governments are so eager to plow money into electric  
cars. This week, Ontario’s McGuinty government (which likes to brag that 
Ontario  is Canada’s greenest province) showered Magna International with 
nearly  $50-million to develop new electric vehicle technologies. Magna, which 
is  rolling in dough, admits it doesn’t need the money. But in a world where 
capital  and jobs are mobile, such gratuities are expected. 
Dalton McGuinty is a true believer in electric cars. He hopes that, by 
2020,  5 per cent of the vehicles on Ontario’s roads will be electric. That’s 
why he’s  also plowing money into charging stations and battery technologies. 
There’s just one problem. The fantasy that electric cars are right around 
the  corner doesn’t survive even the most cursory reality check. As Dennis  
DesRosiers, a leading auto consultant, points out, consumers simply won’t pay 
a  $20,000 premium for a vehicle that doesn’t go very far, isn’t very 
convenient,  and runs out of juice as soon as you turn on the air conditioner. 
Consider hybrids. After a decade on the market, they’ve captured only 3 per 
 cent of sales. To get to Mr. McGuinty’s 2020 target, green-minded 
Ontarians  would have to buy at least 100,000 electric cars a year every year, 
starting  right now. Total U.S. sales of electric vehicles are about 10,000 a 
year. 
Of course, electric cars aren’t in mass production yet. And the technology 
is  bound to get better and cheaper. Right? 
Not so fast, says the University of Manitoba’s Vaclav Smil, who’s among 
the  world’s foremost scholars of energy economics. Electric cars, he says, 
aren’t  microchips, and Moore’s law doesn’t apply. “The myth that the future 
belongs to  electric vehicles is one of the original misconceptions,” he 
writes in his book  Energy Myths and Realities. In an interview, he notes that 
recent  history is filled with energy breakthroughs that turned out be 
duds. Electric  car crazes have come and gone before. Perhaps some people may 
remember a  Canadian company called Ballard, which claimed to have developed a 
breakthrough  fuel-cell technology. Many brainy people swore that Ballard 
was the future. It  wasn’t. 
Here’s another catch: Electric cars aren’t necessarily green at all. 
Electric  vehicles require large amounts of electricity – so much that Toronto 
Hydro chief  Anthony Haines says he doesn’t know how he’d get it. “If you 
connect about 10  per cent of the homes on any given street with an electric 
car, the electricity  system fails,” he said recently. 
And if the extra electricity isn’t generated by renewable energy, then  
overall carbon dioxide emissions will go up, not down, Prof. Smil says. “The  
only way electric cars could reduce global carbon emissions would be if all 
the  additional electricity needed to power them came from carbon-free 
energies.” He  also makes the essential point that the world’s energy 
infrastructure is based  on fossil fuels. Changing that will take decades. 
Please don’t blame me for this splash of cold water. Blame the greens, 
whose  grasp of basic consumer behaviour, energy economics and political 
realities are  shockingly inadequate. The facts Prof. Smil sets out exist 
independently of  global warming, which, he believes, is a well-established 
reality. 
But just  because the facts are unwelcome doesn’t make them untrue. Time and 
time again,  the greens have harmed their cause with their uninformed 
fervour and simplistic  thinking. 
As for cutting down on fossil-fuel consumption, the future is both bright 
and  dim. The good news is, improved technologies have brought much better 
fuel  efficiency – 50 or 60 miles per gallon – well within our reach. 
Stricter  standards would quickly pay off big. For that matter, so would 
persuading 
 businesses to let workers telecommute twice a week – a change that would 
cut  more fossil-fuel use than millions of electric cars. 
The bad news is, the worldwide number of cars is set to double. And not 
even  Mr. McGuinty can change that.

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