To very gradually switch to e-cars over the next half century means more than doubling our present electricity generation, over 100 new large power stations. Renewables are out, we can't even get remotely near to present targets, let alone increase by such a vast factor. Fossil fuels on such a scale are out if we are not to destroy our world.
That leaves nuclear, which isn't exactly flavour of the month currently. In addition to the increase of well over 100 large power stations, we'd need to replace all the present nuclear stations and most of our fossil fuel stations over the same 50 years since all will be well beyond end of life in that period. Indeed those about to be renewed would be nearing the point of next renewal in that period since 60 years is about the normal life now.
So we need to build approaching 200 large power stations over the 50 years, mostly nuclear. The record for building a small station is two years in South Korea, but even they struggled to achieve four years usually. But we need large stations and our only modern second generation nuclear station, Sizewell B, took 14 years from the go-ahead to producing electricity, so what's the chance of us building four every year continuously for 50 years? Not a cat-in-hells chance of course.
All this is without even considering the impossibility of getting the power to the batteries for charging as I've shown above, so e-cars are not the future, they are a pipe dream, hence my realism about the likely future of less personal travel in future and increased use of public transport. Yes Tonio, it's a horrible prospect in an increasingly over-populated world, I couldn't agree more, but 2 and 2 just don't make 5, let alone 40 or more.
On the fuel tax income issue, that's not a problem, we have dual path already with red and plain diesel and the same can exist even more effectively for electricity through using smart meters and "tell-tales" in the cars' sealed charging systems. Rest assured you'd pay through the nose for e-car electricity if it were possible, so no change there.
I agree with Harry that the sort of enthusiasm this chap has is to be welcomed to help stir up debate on the personal transport issue, but we have to be realistic and look at the whole scenario. E-car design is not the start point, where the electricity comes from is, and that design and planning problem needs to be solved first. Nuclear fusion stations might be part of the answer, but that won't be this side of 50 years.
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