150 MPG - Not Good Enough
SEARCH BLOG: AUTOMOBILE and CO2 The awards ceremony was just a prelude to GM's stunning midday press conference, when Wagoner and Vice Chairman Bob Lutz showed off the Chevrolet Volt concept car. The sporty Volt represents GM's most ambitious effort to close the gap with Toyota and Honda in alternative-fuel technology. While Toyota and Honda dominate the market for hybrid-powered vehicles, GM is placing a big bet on the Volt's "e-flex" system that features a chargeable lithium-ion battery and a small gasoline engine that generates electricity. Lutz said the Volt's future rests on improvements in battery technology, but said it was "reasonable" to expect a production version could be available by 2010. He couldn't resist ribbing GM's critics in the environmental movement, some of whom lay the blame for global warming on the automaker in the documentary, "An Inconvenient Truth." "A GM electrical vehicle is an inconvenient truth," Lutz said, with tongue firmly planted in cheek.
From The Detroit News:
Well, there are just two things wrong with that:
1. The Volt, if it goes into production, will still use gasoline, andYou might well ask, why is that a problem if the car gets 150 mpg? It's not a problem as far as I am concerned, but you have to realize that this car will still produce CO2!
2. The electricity used to recharge its batteries will come from power plants
A small amount from the engine, you say. True, but unless it is plugged into an electric grid with a nuclear power plant, it will contribute to CO2 production where the electricity is being generated. And you all know what that means... global disaster! We've been assure of that by sources like RealClimate.org. I really like the picture at the top of their site that shows the sun really close to the earth... about to consume the earth in fire, so it seems. Very dramatic, don't you think? Sorry, I digressed.
Why can't someone just design the perfect car? Maybe solar powered, with optional mast and sails, that is amphibious if there is a river nearby.
Hmmmmmmmm.