Thanks for a great year Robert and all the best to you, your family and the wider FC/EE Teams for a great Xmas and NY.
@Jaw0lf21 күн бұрын
Love your positivity and the rants!! Seasons greetings to all of the Fully Charged Crew.
@P13CEY21 күн бұрын
You missed the U.K. record breaking wind generation, breaking 22GW in early December for the first time and reaching 22.3GW the other night. 👍
@Dan-r9y8v20 күн бұрын
✌️
@NealeUpstone20 күн бұрын
I did too. I'd been thinking we were due another with recent weather and what's come online since last Dec. I do wonder though if we are actually seeing some generation curtailed at these times, as we're not currently optimally set up (grid and dynamic demand) for being able to absorb all this while needing to maintain perhaps 3GW of gas turbine running. Roll on more EVs, more smart heat pumps and more storage 🙂
@philiptaylor790220 күн бұрын
Make that 22.54 GW as of last night.
@alfiedamage920320 күн бұрын
@@P13CEY wind turbines falling apart due to the storm must give you nightmares.
@benpaynter20 күн бұрын
My National Grid app sent an alert that they think yesterday (18th) broke the record from earlier in the month 22.5GW
@anthonymalovrh291221 күн бұрын
Have had solar at home since 2008. After moving to Arizona from Wisconsin in 2016 installed a larger solar system and have driven a EV since August 2019. Currently producing a surplus of solar electricity of at least 35%.
@Noneyabusinessok20 күн бұрын
You wouldn't get that in the UK. Not even in the south, and if like me you live in Northern Ireland. Then solar is about as good as an ashtray on a motorbike. The reason people have it on their roof was the money they could make back or the company that installed them made the money and you got free solar. Anyone I know who has them stated that if you are lucky you can have free p gets at night. And an odd kettle boiled. Arizona now that's a different climate and sun to the UK. Unfortunately not everywhere is suitable for solar. And as a so called genius stated 100 square miles of solar in Arizona would be enough to power all of America. The problem is the batteries and storing the electricity.
@craigmerrow22517 күн бұрын
Same here in Maine, designed and built an almost-tiny off grid passive solar home nine years ago and never looked back. Tied into the grid two years ago and discovered that I used 864 kwh last year, and produced over 6000. Great to charge my car with the sun!
@Noneyabusinessok17 күн бұрын
@@craigmerrow225 what's the sun like in Maine? And how much did the solar cost when you built it?
@zoransarin541114 күн бұрын
@@Noneyabusinessokif you google Maine and Northern Ireland, you find the latitude of Maine is 42-47 degrees and NI is 54%. That means you are further from the Equator and therefore closer to the Arctic and would expect both slightly lesser sunlight in strength and quantity.
@Noneyabusinessok14 күн бұрын
@zoransarin5411 that's my point, solar panels are no good for NI although there are many who have them. And they got them because of a scheme that came in years ago where they didn't have to pay. And any profits were given to the companies that installed the solar. And the residents would benefit from the savings. Although in summer we have a few good weeks and it stays light until around 11.30 at night in the North west coast. In the south of England it can be beneficial for the people. But NI and Scotland and the North of England see very little sun unless we have a good summer. And the UK can be temperamental.
@steverichmond714221 күн бұрын
This is the kind of report that makes me happy..... because it's true....
@maximusasauluk735920 күн бұрын
The Chinese desert wind farm at average production would surpass the total yearly electricity consumption of Portugal.
@GoldenTV321 күн бұрын
4% is HUGE. What if next year they do another say 6%. That's already 1/10 of all petrol stations replaced with electric. Then the year after that maybe they streamline the process and do another 10%.
@williamblue999621 күн бұрын
I enjoyed the positive stories please keep getting the message out, stay well and safe. good to hear stories from all over the world
@michaelfields898121 күн бұрын
Happy Christmas to you all at Fully Charged. See you next year.
@jameskeenan141621 күн бұрын
Best show ever - we love a real world range test - Thank You
@camneilsen823421 күн бұрын
Deadset nearly spat my coffee 9:18 when an ad interrupted Robert right in the middle of words" in the world! " Lol the ad was for my local councils green waste bins 😅
@Paulruk17 күн бұрын
🎄🌲Happy Christmas Robert and team 🎄🎄
@plinble20 күн бұрын
50 years ago Texas was at the leading edge of technology. Calculators and LED watches, specifically Texas Instruments. Seems like they still have some practical electronics skills.
@Rombitekti21 күн бұрын
Happy Holidays, and thanks for the good news!
@CitiesForTheFuture203021 күн бұрын
I've been watching the "climate shenanigans" for over 2 decades now (I have a post graduate degree in environmental management) and have been growing increasingly despondent at the lack of progress on climate action and more alarmed as impacts intensifies. Your positive news stories are about the only thing keeping hope alive for me - a BIG thank you to you and the team! I also watch the Just Have A Think channel which recently featured your new website - I'm have already bookmarked it and subscribed to the newsletter. I'm in South Africa and we are way behind the trend. I will probably never own an EV, which does make me feel a little sad. Hopefully I'm still alive after 2035 when - theoretically - the last ICE will roll off the production line... we must organise a BIG global party to celebrate!!!!
@ramblerandy239721 күн бұрын
@@CitiesForTheFuture2030 I watch both this channel and JHAT too. And have an Environmental Science degree aswell, and both channels do keep hope alive me, so Snap !
@keithbrown33921 күн бұрын
I feel your pain
@xxwookey21 күн бұрын
Try listening to 'Cleaning up', 'Watt Matters, 'Volts', 'The Energy Gang', and 'The Interchange'. All Podcasts that follow the energy transition (and you've already discovered 'Just have a think'). Things really are moving quite fast now, and it's pretty clear that energy and ground transport will be largely decarbonised over the next two decades, at least in the developed world. Steel and cement and shipping are showing signs of progress too. Buildings and agriculture still need _a lot_ of work, and what's going to happen in the developing world isn't clear (that's almost entirely about finance, rather than technology). The last decade has been extremely depressing if you understand the problem and we've got ourselves in a very bad place, but assuming civilisation can hold together a bit longer I feel like we are finally getting somewhere, and most of the money is now going to at least 'better' stuff, if not actually 'good' stuff, and we still have a fighting chance of coming out under 2C and 10 billion people in the end.
@stevenbarrett764821 күн бұрын
Sadly it will be fringe or poor area's that will be most impacted initially, Polar Bear's cannot hunt food as there's no ice but who gives a t*ss in London or New York so long as they can still drive their petrol and diesel cars s*d the rest of the World as they know climate change isn't real, our own MP's drive around in gas guzzlers when they could be in long rang tesla's charged from solar banks and stored energy. Lip service is all we get
@doriangray698519 күн бұрын
@CitiesForTheFuture2030 maybe you can explain. Uk going to spend 22 billion on technology to capture carbon. Wouldn't it be easier to grow plants/trees etc. ?
@FutureSystem7385 күн бұрын
Thanks Robert, great as always. 👍 We ADORE our 5+ year old Tesla Model 3 - though might pass it on to a family member soon I guess (as it’s still as good as new) and update to a new Juniper model Y, better for my old bones and bad joints.
@patrickbrady44721 күн бұрын
Thank you for a very informative and positive video, it is good to hear someone who knows what they are taking about and are not in the pocket of big oil talking about renewable energy. Happy Christmas from West Australia
@Skeptic23621 күн бұрын
Excellent stories Robert...you always prove the future is renewable. Best wishes for Christmas🎄 and the NY🎉 for you and the team and families...looking forward to Everything Electric Sydney🖖
@paulocamacho297621 күн бұрын
Have a merry christmas, you and your family Robert 👍👍
@EugeneLambert16 күн бұрын
Happy Christmas and New Year back at you. Thanks, as always, for all your hard work in keeping us amused and informed.
@Stephen-Jones21 күн бұрын
Merry Xmas and Happy New Year to the entire fully charged/everything electric team.
@SmartMart165820 күн бұрын
Merry Christmas & a Happy New Year to all at the Fully Charged Show & all those who watch this channel 😀😍🤩 Keep up the great work!
@rappermusician20 күн бұрын
Thanks Rober,t Merry Christmas to you too and all at Fully Charged - what thing that wind farm in Australia is going to be
@mrmitch505415 күн бұрын
Merry Christmas to the fully charged team
@thomasharrington435421 күн бұрын
I love your channel. Keep up the good work!
@acefoxuk20 күн бұрын
I love these episodes, full of facts and laughter 👌🏻😂👏🏻 subscribed to both channels and love the content and presenters.
@daves402621 күн бұрын
Happy Xmas and new year to you and yours
@mallamal557821 күн бұрын
Redwood materials process batteries which will be then create new batteries. Teslas new batteries will last a lot longer than 15 years.
@markiliff21 күн бұрын
Lovely job. Have a great break
@mikemellor75920 күн бұрын
I really enjoy and value your ABN videos - thanks & Happy Christmas. 🎅
@ramblerandy239721 күн бұрын
Friend's experience of his Tesla's range is that it doesn't go as far as its stated range. He has a little problem with the old right foot though. But what car ever does reach it's advertised range, BEV or ICEV? Actually, my ID3 PP still does its VW summer stated range = 261 miles or more on a run. It used to do 280 when newish, and I swear if I babied it, it might do near 300. Anyway, that said, if a Tesla M3 LR does 380-400 miles at this time of the year, that's pretty damn good, and surely enough for 99% of potential buyers.
@lyfandeth21 күн бұрын
My present car exceeds the EPA highway rating. The one before it also exceeded the EPA highway spec, if the pop up headlights were retracted. Aerodynamics and your right make a difference. But running an ICE engine that was designed for gasoline on E10 cuts about 10% off the resl mpg--as confirmed by many reports to the EPA. If your ICE car is designed with a flex-fuel engine, that loss will be lower, but it is still there.
@rogerstarkey539021 күн бұрын
Did he ever get the "stated Fuel consumption" on an ICE car? NOBODY ever tried, if they're honest.
@markeaton673421 күн бұрын
This is normal. If I drive sensibly I can beat the stated range easily, but if I do lots of hard acceleration it won't.
@geirmyrvagnes871821 күн бұрын
As illustrated in that little segment, it doesn't matter much at all, as long as the range is decent and the charging is fast and convenient. Basically if you drive a Tesla in populated areas of the First World or China.
@Burtis8920 күн бұрын
I'd be happy with a VW e-up! If there was a charger at work or I could charge at home (don't have a drive or allocated parking or really much luck parking in the same road 😅). Rarely drive more than 100 miles in one go and when I did I wouldn't mind stopping here and there to let the dogs stretch their legs (and me)
@jovanzee580521 күн бұрын
Thanks Old Man. See you next year. Stay safe.
@seangibbons652021 күн бұрын
Another great video keep up the great work
@darkanvil3d21 күн бұрын
That shock jock was expressing the frustration that $7.5bn was allocated to charging infrastructure in 2021, but by March 2024 ony 7 stations that the money was put towards had opened. Openings do appear to be accelerating, or at least projects in the works. It's a highlight of government waste and inefficiecy which is a separate issue. The many thousands you refer to being opened are probably Electrify America, funded by VW as punishment for dieselgate. They seem to be extremely unreliable. Public charging has some way to go.
@nguyep420 күн бұрын
Electrify America isn't meant for reliability. Design to break furthering VW distain of EV. Poor charging experience to turn off EV owners and stop potential buyers. VW only makes enough EV and not a unit more to be in compliance. No fines or credits are needed.
@Validole20 күн бұрын
Recent test by Aging Wheels provides at least anecdotal evidence that the state of non-Tesla public charging has gotten much better over the last year.
@geoffreyevans613317 күн бұрын
The money has been allocated and still exists. It’s just that most of the charging infrastructure has not been built expeditiously. It is a falsehood to imply that the money has all been wasted to build only a few stations.
@craigmerrow22517 күн бұрын
@@geoffreyevans6133Very true! It's the permitting process that takes a long time, but as these get completed, we'll see more public chargers come online.
@mightymoto26368 күн бұрын
Non Tesla charging stations getting more reliable (but not fast enough). There are thousands of charging points inside of the USA ! And what’s left over of the allocated is slowly being doled out to many installers, including Tesla. Of all the installations, the Tesla chargers happen (at this time) to be more reliable and easy to use. Charging times are slowly coming down, especially with the newer battery technology.
@petergorton984818 күн бұрын
I drove the Nullabor twice (solo) in my Model 3, in 2022. It required a little planning and took about a day longer than most of my 20+ ICE trips (usually 3 days). It gets better every day, and next year we will do it again towing our teardrop caravan.
@freeheeler0918 күн бұрын
I’d like to see more Level 2 chargers at restaurants and grocery stores, etc., placed where people stop for over a half hour. Running power to Level 2 chargers isn’t complex. And a lot of that power could be supplied by putting solar panels on parking lots and grocery and other store roofs.
@Bercilakdehautdesert-yt1gd8 күн бұрын
In the UK most restaurants don't have car parks, and a good number of us (unsure of the data these days) have groceries delivered. I have walked down to my local Aldi for a few small items, but I have no reason to drive to go shopping - almost everything is bought online.
@billysturgeon861616 күн бұрын
Robert, Kyle with Out of Spec channels in Colorado (U.S.A.) tested the rear wheel drive long range model 3 from 100% till it stops while driving 70mph and it went 486 miles. The weather was however very good and almost no wind. They perform this test on many EVs.
@ericn322119 күн бұрын
Love your show and of course subscribed.
@elainebradley821317 күн бұрын
Where we live 3 year round gas stations have disappeared and the local one is seasonal. Ours is the only local electric car and being liberated from worrying about gas is wonderful.
Loving this semi scripted presentation style Robert. Best wishes for you and yours for the coming year.
@brita65420 күн бұрын
I am an avid supporter of renewables and an owner of a Ford Lightning. I was not aware the number was actually at 50% generation of world energy created by renewables/nuclear. This is good news to me also. I really never would have guessed it was that high. Wow
@GregHarveyUK20 күн бұрын
Personally, I'd like a fact check on that. The IEA mid year figures made it more like 30%, with coal still bigger than anything else and gas still huge. 😬
@brita65420 күн бұрын
@@GregHarveyUK I doubted it also. Then I did some googling. My Google search supported it.
@zapfanzapfan20 күн бұрын
Actually, renewables + nuclear is 40%. Fossil is 60%, renewables 30% and nuclear 10%. I just checked Our World In Data. Figures from 2024 are not reported yet but 2023 it was 39% so it probably crossed 40% this year. It has hovered around 35% for the past 40 years... but it is growing 0.5-1.0% per year now.
@kevinsmith334320 күн бұрын
What Robert said was Uk is at 50% of electricity from renewables AND other zero energy sources - and the world 30% of electricity from renewables. It's important not to confound Electricity with energy as in the Uk we use more energy direct from fossil fuel burning than we do by converting to electricity - it's our gas and oil boilers and even log burners and coal fires that heat most of us. Of course wind, solar and nuclear all have carbon footprints but as we put more low carbon electricity on the world's grids so the embedded carbon in the installations shrinks in a virtuous cycle.
@zapfanzapfan20 күн бұрын
@@kevinsmith3343 No, he very much put emphasis on 51% being the global number.
@davidlemieux61521 күн бұрын
You’re data re NEW charging points paid by the govt are not those you have quoted. This bill cannot take credit for charge stations made prior to the bill and those not benefiting from said bill.
@tomrybold20 күн бұрын
thanks Robert for all your videos l
@lancerbiker526321 күн бұрын
All the best to you and yours. Would be nice to see some Canadian content in the new year. Granted, there will likely be little to report.
@shezcmayo21 күн бұрын
Robert - I hope you get to drive the Eyre Hwy one day. There is an 18 hole golf 'course' along the highway - a hole every 80km or so if you like a hit. Nullarbor Links - The World's Longest Golf Course
@C4rb0neum21 күн бұрын
So what is the conclusion from the range test? 400 miles didn’t work but how many could you get? 380?
@MrAdopado20 күн бұрын
There are so many variables (especially at this time of the year) including the overnight stop. In the summer it would be straightforward, but a few minutes charge over that distance is really no big deal. EVs operate with such a high baseline of efficiency it doesn't take much to nibble away at the ultimate achievable range ... temperature, wind direction, rain, speed, elevation changes over a particular route.
@zoransarin541114 күн бұрын
The speed is an important factor. The video indicates long stretches of highway driving, which is high energy use in an EV. Whether you precondition the battery and how strong you set the A/C can also affect the range.
@davebaker836221 күн бұрын
How much electricity has been produced in the last 8 weeks from renewables here in the uk ?
@mjcamp0121 күн бұрын
Today was a record breaker, 22.54GWp from Wind energy alone. Average was about 10.8GW of wind , solar and Hydro for the last 8 weeks but that includes 2 of the lowest weeks this year. Average for the last 12 months is 11.4GW, 38% of usage.
@mjcamp0121 күн бұрын
Fossil fuel is down to under 28% of generation in the last 12 months
@xxwookey20 күн бұрын
70GW in the Nullarbor is very impressive, but what are they going to do with it all? It's a really long way from everywhere, even by Australian standards. Have really long cables to Adelaide/Esperance/Perth? Start an Aluminium smelter? make hydrogen on the coast?
@zapfanzapfan20 күн бұрын
Yeah, I too wondered about that. Making hydrogen and green ammonia is apparently the plan.
@mightymoto26368 күн бұрын
Actually, do it all. High Voltage power lines cross country to the cities that need the power. Also, use the lines (Grid) for Battery Storage close to the cities to keep the Grid System stable. I have great trepidation about getting free power for everyone, Argentina instantly comes to mind, the government in charge is A-L-W-A-Y-S leads to very bad consequences. It may be (in appearance) really great for a while, but eventually you end up with total governmental control. Yes, I’m not a socialist, Russia keeps reminding me of exactly why I will never be.
@RWBHere6 күн бұрын
This was the most positive and refreshing news broadcast of 2024. Thanks Robert. Wishing you, your wife, and all of the Fully Charged team, the very best for 2025. 🙂👍
@Leo9992920 күн бұрын
The Modern Rogue handle unit conversions (like currency) about the best I've seen. They have a graphic pop up with all the conversions on it. Brian is great, they might share the system they use with you if you ask? Might make it easier as you can just say it once and add almost every conceivable alternative unit in post.
@thumper174721 күн бұрын
Good news Robert!
@jamesphillips228520 күн бұрын
8:00 If your check the latest report on the program they were complaining about: there are now 192 ports installed on something like 32 sites. The 6 charge port figure was a snapshot in time. There is a lot of lead-time in installing Megawatt scale electrical infrastructure.
@jean-marcgruninger901920 күн бұрын
i cycled across the eyre highway in 2011, it was hot and loads of fun.
@AdrianMeredith19 күн бұрын
For the model 3 test it was probably phantom battery drain over the two days you stayed that likely lost you that 20-30 miles or so
@FutureSystem7385 күн бұрын
Phantom drain is virtually zero if Sentry is off so the car can sleep.
@jimmyvee802420 күн бұрын
Early buyers of Tesla cars were offered "energy for life" that is if filling at any of their super charge locations its free. My uncle has that deal, his tesla now has 171k km and 3 years left on warranty.
@nononsenseBennett21 күн бұрын
100% Optimistic!...Funny (nice editing)
@reaperofdoom614621 күн бұрын
But the us gov figure of billions is not funding these chargers Robert . You can not include Tesla chargers and other networks in the total….. apples and oranges deal cheap.
@manzourahmed338318 күн бұрын
Why not generate solar on residential and commercial (factories, warehouses. supermarkets and carparks) where it's needed?
@zoransarin541114 күн бұрын
Google Lazard’s LCoE. Rooftop solar is good, it it is expensive due to its limited size.
@timrowledge715212 күн бұрын
Gosh, that’s brilliant! Just imagine if people could put solar panels on their roof… just like about a quarter of my neighbours.
@theairstig9164Сағат бұрын
Because it’s consumed behind the meter and not taxed which makes electricity retailers sad and angry
@martinagiuslia21 күн бұрын
Great news... 🙂 Honest news.. thank you..
@EVRealFacts7 күн бұрын
See Porsche have written to EV owners telling them not to charge near their houses or in underground spaces due to fire risk.
@DeWo-m6q7 күн бұрын
Is that cos petrol doesn’t burn?
@EVRealFacts6 күн бұрын
@@DeWo-m6q It certainly does my friend, but at one quarter the temperatures of a battery fire. Battery fires are upwards of 2000c which can cause structural steel to collapse which regular car fires cannot achieve. Facts, inconvenient to the idealogues but remain facts nonetheless. The letter from Porsche is to indemnify them from massive legal claims but the facts are they are a fire risk due to poor manufacture and a risk to the owners and those near them should they combust.
@DeWo-m6q5 күн бұрын
@ so does the same thing apply to any battery operated stuff? Phones, laptops, tablets, headphones…. I don’t think your fact (real or not) will put people off EVs.
@trueriver195021 күн бұрын
In fairness the Aussie project is 70 GW total of wind and solar, whereas i think the Chinese record holder is 20 GW just of wind. Not knocking the Aussie project: in a desert the mix of wind and sun makes total sense. I wonder if the Chinese will add solar to their Gobi desert wind farm?
@plinble20 күн бұрын
9:37 70GW who's buying and how is it shipped there?
@andreknudsne76482 күн бұрын
big A``trucks..
@danielmadar993821 күн бұрын
Thanks ❤
@camneilsen823421 күн бұрын
Just saw the model of the BYD seal on the top shelf ,where it should be!
@adrianthoroughgood119121 күн бұрын
The 1 GWh battery facility is not a 1 GWh battery, it's a factory for building the enclosures for 2nd life batteries which can produce enough for 1 GWh per year. That's a different company to the 53MWh battery. That company has a total stock of 2 GWh of old batteries to repurpose.
@dieseldavey19 күн бұрын
Thanks for the video. Could you tell us what mileage did the Tesla actually manage. Thanks
@geirvinje255621 күн бұрын
In Norway the gasoline sale have dropped 12,3% October 2024 - October 2023. And, diesel sales 11,9%. So, Shell recharge is just a matter of survival or not. With over 26% EV's on the road. More than pure gasoline cars, this is making a big impact. In one year, or maybe one and a half, EV's on the road will pass diesel cars, too. And, EV's are NOT fossil cars with big batteries....
@leesmith929921 күн бұрын
question: as a battery degrades is it just the capacity that's reduced? does the the efficiency stay the same?
@C4rb0neum21 күн бұрын
Yes less capacity and slightly less power
@leesmith929921 күн бұрын
@@C4rb0neum so efficiency stays the same? i.e. the loss of electricity vs using it straight away. i'm over explaining because i am not sure if i have the right terminology.
@robinbennett599421 күн бұрын
The efficiency (energy in vs energy out) stays roughly the same, as does the self-discharge rate (which is very low for lithium batteries). Capacity loss is the only thing you'll notice with an old EV.
@MrAdopado20 күн бұрын
The efficiency of the drive train remains the same ... so if you originally achieved 4 miles per kWh you will still get 4 miles per kWh (but the battery will hold a few kWh less). Some EVs that are "performance optimised" models do max out the rate at which electricity can be drawn from the battery pack... and the rate at which power can be drawn from the pack does tend to be related to capacity ... so in that situation it may be that ultimate "standing quarter" acceleration is slightly reduced but you would need timing equipment to be able to tell. Most normal EVs don't max out the pack so it doesn't apply at all.
@rumanuu19 күн бұрын
We've had a NX for 2 years and only found out sbout the reason for the 8 beeps last week from someone in the service department 😅
@AdrianNelson150720 күн бұрын
I'm a young old Jag driver. 3 litre twin turbo powerrrrrr, and it makes me sad that they're not just making an ev-xf
@omelborpon315921 күн бұрын
I love it when Robert is so positive. Wait. Was that actually Robert?
@davidrichardson268121 күн бұрын
AI generated Robert?
@jasoncutler813820 күн бұрын
@@davidrichardson2681 Video generated Robert?
@MattOGormanSmith21 күн бұрын
Did you enquire if your old Leaf battery ended up at the Johan Cruyf? That'd be a good brag.
@terrymiskimmin922621 күн бұрын
The ev chargers on the NULLABOR, are diesel powered, room for change?
@trueriver195021 күн бұрын
It doesn't make any sense to run cables all the way across the desert for a few recharge stations. The finance involved is being better spent elsewhere, for example developing grid scale recycled batteries No new infrastructure is needed to deliver the diesel fuel, as these trends to be co-located with ICE filling stations. Once the recharge points are financially proven, it will THEN make sense for each station to install it's own wind and solar generation, plus a big battery to cover peak demand (like if a convoy of eVs arrive at once). It's a sensible transition arrangement. And in the meantime I would rather someone has an electric car which was charged by diesel once a year for a long road trip than feeling the need to stick with their ICE car in order to make the annual visit to Aunty Mabel.
@MrAdopado20 күн бұрын
No doubt they will be replaced with solar as time progresses.
@alexd30210 күн бұрын
Solar/wind with battery storage seems the obvious.
@Mr_Foresight11 күн бұрын
Early cars did a few MPG and needed a service after a few trips. Now they can do up to 60 MPG and have a yearly service. EVs will evolve to be very efficient with a range of 1000 Miles without a service and will charge in 10 minutes.
@DaveQZ8520 күн бұрын
4% is still no small number, when it comes to Big Oil letting go of something.
@thomasmiller140619 күн бұрын
Is there any chance the news videos can be added to a playlist as i find these vids the most interesting on the channel?
@flolou849621 күн бұрын
Does anyone know how range specifications are arrived at ? Specifically, it is based on 50/50 ratio of city VS highway driving or it more based on 80% city and 20% highway ? Without knowing this, how can we feel informed to accurately estimate the advertised range in our own particular locations?
@BALANCEDPORTFOLIO21 күн бұрын
I think the EPA uses a rolling road in a lab. So no weather challenges, no human drivers. You can say that a 400-mile car will go further than a 300-mile on one charge but it's a comparison, not a guarantee. And I don't suppose the car's aircon and entertainment systems and heated seats etc will be on, so nothing like a long trip on a chilly wet day on the motorway
@MrAdopado20 күн бұрын
These "range" figures are standardised measurements depending on the scheme applicable in your own country. eg WLTP, EPA, CLTC, NEDC. If you look at the resulting numbers for the different schemes for a particular model you will see a huge variation. This doesn't mean that one is "correct" and one is "wrong". Within one particular scheme it should facilitate comparison of one model/brand with another. Each scheme uses different standard and proportions of slow/fast driving. They are not very successful at giving the average driver an accurate guide to how much range they will achieve with their own driving pattern. The reality is that EVs are operating at the upper level of efficiency when achieving their optimum range. This means that relatively slight variations in driving conditions will tend to have a significant impact on range. An ICE vehicle in normal conditions throws away most of its energy in the form of heat ... so on a really cold day some of that heat can be used to warm the cabin ... the engine was making that heat anyway so there is no loss to "range" because that energy would have just been dispersed into the outside air if not heating the car. An EV doesn't throw away much energy. It uses its battery power for the motor(s) and if no cabin heating is required all the battery power is used to extend the range. On that very cold day there is little spare heat so it has to use some battery power to heat the cabin ... this reduces the proportion for the motor(s) ... so range is somewhat reduced. So when tested for a quoted "range" this will have to have been at a set temperature. This is just one aspect of variation. Manufacturers are required to use the testing regimes agreed for their country. The idea is that this makes a level playing field.
@w307221 күн бұрын
nice job
@kennethstealey131121 күн бұрын
I do love your intro sequence
@jeffreyfearn56622 күн бұрын
The Jaguar looks more like a car from the 1920s
@Leopold510021 күн бұрын
excellent
@theairstig91642 сағат бұрын
6:47 Shell: we have lots and lots of petrol and diesel tanks stuck in the ground under retail premises. Pretty soon they will be end of life and need to be replaced or removed. In another 20 years we won’t be able to sell petrol or diesel any more … what to do? What to do! Also Shell: leave the tanks in the ground, put DC chargers on top, run them at a loss while claiming it’s profitable and sell the whole thing off as a going concern. Thus avoiding the liability for the tanks still under the ground Also Shell: *smug grin*
@tlock469821 күн бұрын
Please come back to Hastings soon, always welcome
@roderickmain969720 күн бұрын
Merry Christmas Robert and everyone at Everything Electric, Fully Charged and all your other nooks and crannies. I would observe that whilst its good to have positive stuff, we should also have negative stuff - otherwise you dont make a circuit ;-) ABN: Have you done a piece on Euro Garages yet? Just up the road from me (East side of Edinburgh next to A1) is their latest forecourt. When you go to it you think "Oh look. 4 Tesla V4 charges. I'll have some of that". Except they are branded as EG charges (dont read the "nozzle". It still says Tesla). There is credit card operation or, if you are a Tesla owner, works like any other Tesla supercharger. (it appears as a supercharger on the Car's map). I think this is an interesting step forward.
@stevenbarrett764821 күн бұрын
400 miles is good, by the end of next year 500 will probably be the standard for most long range EV's
@iKaGe0121 күн бұрын
Anything over 350 is more than my old ICE car. Think I got 410 out of it once
@DavidKnowles021 күн бұрын
I doubt it will be standard that quickly but by the end of the decade I be surprise if the majority of EV models, either on sale or coming on sale will be hitting 500 to 600 miles or a more as standard. With people only need to charge once a month or once every couple of months.
@iKaGe0121 күн бұрын
@@DavidKnowles0 That'd mean fitting a 150+ kWh battery. I mean not having to charge out and about is great but the cars would be a lot heavier and so less efficient so may need an even bigger battery/motor
@jbmaru20 күн бұрын
@@iKaGe01 In 5 years, we will have lighter batteries with more capacity.
@nononsenseBennett21 күн бұрын
RELIABLE CHARGING will be when charging pads are introduced. Induction makes sense and only about 5% loss over wired. Make it easy and everyone will use it.
@MrAdopado20 күн бұрын
Perhaps .. but small percentages, when applied to so many vehicles, add up. For a large country like USA this could add up to hundreds of power stations ... power stations that you wouldn't need if people just plugged in once in a while!
@SebastianFleischhacker21 күн бұрын
Shell is doing great. It would be amazing if you could cover 2nd biggest Oil&Gas company in Spain, which just rebranded, got rid of their fossil brand and are now warp speed on to a green future -> MOEVE
@jamesallen585020 күн бұрын
The “But hey now!” Part of the edit was inspired.
@michalstelmach420320 күн бұрын
I own a Tesla Model 3 LR but AWD and it’s no problem to get 350 miles per charge without even trying. I got easily 220Wh/mile. Citi driving you can go well below 160Wh/mile that gives you over 400miles of range.
@MrAdopado20 күн бұрын
Absolutely correct ... but Robert was testing a specific long distance drive that includes motorway driving not dawdling around city streets! Huge range when staying within a city isn't why people are looking for longer range cars ... we already have cars that can do the mileage needed in cities.
@michalstelmach420320 күн бұрын
@MrAdopado Yes you are right. Around 50% of my driving are highways up to 80mph. Driving steadily 80mph I got 280Wh/mile so around 270miles range. Driving 70mph it drops to 220Wh/mile and 340miles of range. Winter driving drops of of those values by 20%.
@rktwnb21 күн бұрын
Can you perhaps cover the organized opposition to offshore wind power in California by a group called REACT Alliance? They are potentially going to stop the best chance California has to get off fossil electricity and aren’t proposing any alternatives. They seem like a bunch of NIMBYs and the project is 20 miles off shore. They also say they aren’t funded by dark fossil money.
@JohnOgilvy-w9r21 күн бұрын
You’re adoipstick
@MrAdopado20 күн бұрын
Loads of off-shore around the UK these days ... and we've just achieved record wind generation stats within the past couple of days. It seems to work ... and off-shore wind farms aren't a major source of angst amongst the general population.
@philborer87718 күн бұрын
Cal really doesn't need wind because they have so much solar possibilities. With storage and solar combo wind isn't needed.
@rktwnb18 күн бұрын
@ maybe! Although diverse sources are a good thing.
@freeheeler0918 күн бұрын
California and all states could start by helping citizens install solar and batteries. The oligarchs and mega corporations can get affordable financing but We the People cannot. Start figuring out how to get solar panels on every appropriate roof and batteries in every garage. That would create a very clean and robust grid, negate the need for as many expensive power lines, and give families more financial security. While we are at it, figure out a way to help people insulate their homes, finance the switch from gas to heat pumps, etc. What I’m proposing is hugely expensive, but far less expensive than allowing climate change to continue to destroy insurance markets, destroy homes and businesses and cities, etc. Then, let’s build offshore solar in California and other appropriate places, improve generation for our hydroelectric dams, hire experienced oil company personnel to drill geothermal wells, etc. The good news is that more engineers aand scientists are currently working to improve battery and solar and nuclear and hydrogen and wind and other green technologies. The genie is out of the bottle. I’d like to see families benefit from solar, batteries, etc. rather than just corrupt corporations and billionaire oligarchs.
@davemartin991219 күн бұрын
Sorry to break it to you Robert., but as of today, there are still only 214 operational chargers installed by the US Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which was enacted in November 2021.
@USUG012 күн бұрын
a 70GW plant costing just $2-3B is a bit too optimistic, though. It should cost not less than $50B at current installation prices
@gmuzz21 күн бұрын
I now understand why the shoes are on the shelf
@fynfynsidian187021 күн бұрын
It wasn't 8 chargers it was 8 STATES, also that was the total amount of the entire program that gets paid out over time with awarding contracts via RFPs with States - this per Pete Buttigieg, US Secretary of Transportation
@jamesengland746121 күн бұрын
The whole picture is missing here. There are thousands of charging ports, and growing, but the particular federal program has been extremely slow to pay out, and has paid out for a very small number of projects yet, not having spent $1.5B, but having the money and not spent virtually any of it yet. It may very well be only 8 projects.
@MrAdopado20 күн бұрын
Yes, this story wasn't represented very effectively.
@angelikmichal20 күн бұрын
So The Model 3 Car Test Failed. You tried to brush over it as quickly as possible, but at least you said it out loud. Thank you.
@TheKnightsShield21 күн бұрын
16:02 Unfortunately, there'll still be some that'll say "oh, but 400 miles isn't enough for me!!" and that "EVs are only good for local trips, to the shops". Well, unless you live on one side of the country and the shop you absolutely need is on the other, I'm pretty sure the new Model 3 LR will be more than enough for you to get your bottle of soy milk and organic avocados. I don't know, some people, eh?!
@Phuc_Yhou21 күн бұрын
Most people who say that have never driven more than 400 miles non stop in a single journey
@jimsEVadventures21 күн бұрын
Fossil Fuel FUD? Say it ain't so! These cartels need to be held to account for all their lies!
@mavhc21 күн бұрын
@@jimsEVadventures first step would be holding them accountable for the pollution they cause
@clivestainlesssteelwomble766521 күн бұрын
Don't forget the backhanders via the political 🍊🤡 slobbyist ... We are being charged for them as well as the 1% of directors /bosses bonuses for doing us over again for the next 50yrs. They hope.😂🧙🏼♂️
@trekkifpv197620 күн бұрын
Hehe love the top gear reference 👍
@pauld696721 күн бұрын
That 192,000 number is counting those we privately installed, WITH MONEY OUT OF OUR OWN POCKETS, in our garages. No reimbursement from the program came to me! The idea of the program was to create a comparable network of DC fast chargers to compete with/complement Tesla's Supercharger network, not Level Two. So that program is rightly considered a boondoggle.
@jiggig20 күн бұрын
Really grinds my gears when a video lies like this. No way they dont know this.
@jamajcaman20 күн бұрын
Community note incoming... Oh wait this is not X and is NOT ALLOWED 😢
@jamesphillips228520 күн бұрын
That program requires a minimum of 4 ports for funding. So right there you know the 6 (not shure why it chaged to 8) port figure was not the full story. My local utility has a 2 year lead time of Megawatt scale power.