Interesting take on the sustainability of electric vehicles. If there is anyone of a gentler disposition, the language is a little strong in parts.
View: https://youtu.be/L_zdtaJeYmw

) with cells going dead in the battery pack. I generally find that he tells it pretty straight.I've seen John Cadogan before. He doesnt mind his language and he does tend to crusade a bit. But he does make a point . . .
Good post !

No one seems to ask about all the extra electricity we will have to generate either. We're already hearing that without further nuclear power stations we could be facing power cuts in the coming years. If we all have electric vehicles, where is all that extra power coming from?
Just don't mention the left-over piles of radioactive garbage that are left after the stations get to the end of their lives. Must be about time the Welsh Assembly woke up and started looking at all the towns/villages here with "Felin" in their name (Welsh for "mill", for those that don't know). Most, if not all, of them were watermills, and there's no shortage of that round these parts.Hmmm, watermills eh? Reality check, the World's largest wind farm off the South coast of England only generates the same power as for example Sizewell B PWR power Station. Very localised sustainability yes but major production? The reality is we need a balance of sources, Wind Farms, tidal, hydro, solar and gas. Nuclear cheap to construct, nope but it's on tap demand 24/7/365 with a life cycle of 50 years per Unit. Oh, decaying nuclear waste = amerisium (excuse smelling) = space batteries (accepted on waste storage though, good for jobs). The new technology of smaller fast breeder reactors is the future, quick and cheaper to buildFrom all these wonderful cheap and clean nuclear power stations, of course.Just don't mention the left-over piles of radioactive garbage that are left after the stations get to the end of their lives. Must be about time the Welsh Assembly woke up and started looking at all the towns/villages here with "Felin" in their name (Welsh for "mill", for those that don't know). Most, if not all, of them were watermills, and there's no shortage of that round these parts.
Utterly sustainable, and the only pollution would come from building turbines and generators. Guess there's no profit in that, then. Cynical? Moi?