Around the world, governments and automakers are promoting
electric vehicles as a key technology to curb oil use and fight climate change.
General Motors has said it aims to stop selling new gasoline-powered cars and
light trucks by 2035 and will pivot to battery-powered models. Volvo said it
would move even faster and introduce an all-electric lineup by 2030.
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But as electric cars and trucks go mainstream, they have faced a
persistent question: Are they really as green as advertised?
While experts broadly agree that plug-in vehicles are a more
climate-friendly option than traditional vehicles, they can still have their
own environmental impacts, depending on how they are charged up and
manufactured. Here is a guide to some of the biggest worries — and how they
might be addressed.
It matters how the electricity is made
Broadly speaking, most electric cars sold today tend to produce
significantly fewer planet-warming emissions than most cars fueled with
gasoline. But a lot depends on how much coal is being burned to charge up those
plug-in vehicles. And electric grids still need to get much, much cleaner
before electric vehicles are truly emissions free.
One way to compare the climate impacts of different vehicle
models is with an
interactive online tool by
researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who tried to
incorporate all the relevant factors: what it takes to manufacture the cars,
how much gasoline conventional cars burn and where the electricity to charge
electric vehicles comes from.
If you assume electric vehicles are drawing their power from the
average grid in the United States, which typically includes a mix of fossil
fuel and renewable power plants, then they are almost always much greener than
conventional cars. Even though electric vehicles are more emissions-intensive
to make because of their batteries, their electric motors are more efficient
than traditional internal combustion engines that burn fossil fuels.
An all-electric Chevrolet Bolt, for instance, can be expected to
produce 189 grams of carbon dioxide for every kilometer driven over its
lifetime, on average. By contrast, a new gasoline-fueled Toyota Camry is
estimated to produce 385 grams of carbon dioxide per kelometer. A new Ford
F-150 pickup truck, which is even less fuel-efficient, produces 636 grams of
carbon dioxide per kelometer.
But that’s just an average. On the other hand, if the Bolt is
charged up on a coal-heavy grid, such as those currently found in the Midwest,
it can actually be a bit worse for the climate than a modern hybrid car like
the Toyota Prius, which runs on gasoline but uses a battery to bolster its
mileage. (The coal-powered Bolt would still beat the Camry and the F-150,
however.)
“Coal tends to be the critical factor,” said Jeremy Michalek, a
professor of engineering at Carnegie Mellon University. “If you’ve got electric
cars in Pittsburgh that are being plugged in at night and leading nearby coal
plants to burn more coal to charge them, then the climate benefits won’t be as
great, and you can even get more air pollution.”
The good news for electric vehicles is that most countries are
now pushing to clean up their electric grids. In the United States, utilities
have retired hundreds of coal plants over the past decade and shifted to a mix
of lower-emissions natural gas, wind and solar power. As a result, researchers
have found, electric vehicles have generally gotten cleaner, too. And they are
likely to get cleaner still.
“The reason electric vehicles look like an appealing climate
solution is that if we can make our grids zero-carbon, then vehicle emissions
drop way, way down,” said Jessika Trancik, an associate professor of energy
studies at MIT. “Whereas even the best hybrids that burn gasoline will always
have a baseline of emissions they can’t go below.”
Raw materials can be problematic
Like many other batteries, the lithium-ion cells that power most
electric vehicles rely on raw materials — like cobalt, lithium and rare earth
elements — that have been linked to grave environmental and human rights
concerns. Cobalt has been especially problematic.
Mining cobalt produces hazardous tailings and slags that can
leach into the environment, and studies have found high exposure in nearby
communities, especially among children, to cobalt and other metals. Extracting
the metals from their ores also requires a process called smelting, which can
emit sulfur oxide and other harmful air pollution.
And as much as 70 percent of the world’s cobalt supply is mined
in the Congo, a substantial proportion in unregulated “artisanal” mines where
workers — including many children — dig the metal from the earth using only
hand tools at great risk to their health and safety, human rights groups warn.
The world’s lithium is either mined in Australia or from salt
flats in the Andean regions of Argentina, Bolivia and Chile, operations that
use large amounts of groundwater to pump out the brines, drawing down the water
available to Indigenous farmers and herders. The water required for producing
batteries has meant that manufacturing electric vehicles is about 50 percent
more water intensive than traditional internal combustion engines. Deposits of
rare earths, concentrated in China, often contain radioactive substances that
can emit radioactive water and dust.
Focusing first on cobalt, automakers and other manufacturers
have committed to eliminating “artisanal” cobalt from their supply chains, and
have also said they will develop batteries that decrease, or do away with,
cobalt altogether. But that technology is still in development, and the
prevalence of these mines means these commitments “aren’t realistic,” said
Mickaël Daudin of Pact, a nonprofit organization that works with mining
communities in Africa.
Instead, Daudin said, manufacturers need to work with these
mines to lessen their environmental footprint and make sure miners are working
in safe conditions. If companies acted responsibly, the rise of electric
vehicles would be a great opportunity for countries like Congo, he said. But if
they don’t, “they will put the environment, and many, many miners’ lives at risk.”