weepej wrote:
dcbwhaley wrote:
But, mole - the answer to the horse dung problem was to replace the horse with a radically different mode of transport. So, by analogy, the problem of motor car pollution should be addressed by replacing the motor car - not a solution that seems popular with the denizens of these forums.
I must say, when debating with motor car fundamentalist types on the issue of pollution I am left wondering what they are defending; the motor car or the petrol engine, neigh even fossil fuels?
I mean I think the car is a great invention, and indeed with four people in one it's a particularly efficient way of moving people around, but it still pumps out lots of crap due to its power source.
And the stuff it's burning in the main comes from underground sources that are probably best left alone. I mean what's going to happen when we get around to injecting the entire stored carbon reserve into the atmosphere (presuming carbon sequestration doesn't take off in a big way)?
Would be interesting to have a debate from the perspective of the future where vehicles may well be zero emission (probably at point of use if not full stop).
Well, that depends what you're attacking! - The motor car, the petrol engine, or fossil fuels? I can only imagine that as you seemed to be attacking the car based on particulate emissions "causing" loads of extra deaths, you were having a go at the diesel engine? If so, I thought it might help to mention that particular emissions levels were set to fall dramatically (albeit at the expense of even more cost, complexity, and slightly higher CO2 emissions) due to the forthcoming "Euro V" level of emission requirements.
The issue of burning the remaining fosil fuel reserves, however, DOES bother me. It's not so much the "Climate Change" thing (on which I have little knowledge and remain fairly agnostic), but the "sustainability" thing that troubles me. In the years before we actually run out of the stuff, I fear wars and all manner of human suffering as a result of its scarcity. I don't fancy that much! Now, like DCB's climate change scienists, I too must declare an interest - I'm an engineer working in the automotive industry. Everything I say, therefore, needs to be read in that context. That said, I like to think of myself as not completely devoid of moral principles!
As for the future, well, zero emissions at the point of use is a limited reality (in my view) and not one that will solve any problems other than local air quality (which I think is already largely being addressed even with conventional vehicles). "Zero emissions full stop" is not, in my view, achieveable as yet. Not unless we're prepared to put up with cars that only very infrequently, move very small distances, very slowly! However, switching to electrically powered vehicles, does give us a lot more choice as to how we get the energy in the first place. That's our best hope in the short term, I think.