Sorry I didn't get back to this for over a damned week.
codrus (Forum Supporter) said:
GIRTHQUAKE said:
So not to be mean... but what are you looking for then? Total efficiency? Cost calculations? Estimated carbon impact? We have studies on most of those- even the last one! Volvo/Polestar did a deep carbon dive into the XC90 (since it comes in Gas, Diesel, Gas Hybrid, and EV versions) for carbon offset and even counted the type of electrical energy used while engineering and drafting the thing. I can post it when I get home tonight.
Somehow the discussion wandered off onto efficiency and emissions, and seemed to have fallen into the "EVs just move the emissions to the power plant" fallacy. I'm addressing why they do more than that, and thus why it's a fallacy.
As for studies there are lots of them and they almost always seem to support the position of the organization who did the study so I'm doubtful of most of them. We don't really know which technology is better, the answer depends heavily on the assumptions that go into the models. EVs are more flexible though, it's much easier to adapt them to different power sources than it is gasoline engines (at least until we come up with a good way to make gasoline out of CO2 and water)
The Polestar Life Cycle Assessment is an excellent place to start, then; page 4 has the portiioin you're looking for, stating:
The two main differences in the carbon footprint between the Polestar 2 and the ICE appear in the materials production (including the Li-ion battery modules) and the use phase. The carbon footprint from materials production (including the Li-ion battery modules) of the ICE is roughly 40% less than for Polestar 2. Looking at the category “Materials production” the five main contributors for the XC40 ICE are aluminum 34%, steel and iron 34%, electronics 13%, polymers 11% and fluids and undefined 4% (see Figure 10 for more details). For Polestar 2 the main contributors to the carbon footprint of the material production (including Li-ion battery modules) are aluminum 29%, Li-ion battery modules 29%, steel and iron 17%, electronics 10% and polymers 7% (see Figure 10 for more details). It should be noted that the carbon footprint was performed to represent a globally sourced version of the car models. Other methodological choices that have a large impact on the result are choice of allocation method regarding scrap, and choice of datasets for steel and alumin-ium production.
It's a pretty good, in-depth read that details even the primary energy source of the plant that is building the vehicles (In their case, Chinese coal-fired plants) and gives a break-even line graph on page 5 in thousands of kilometers. For their report, the break-even to save carbon from the atmo you'd have to drive your EV over 40,000KM powered sorely via renewables; decently easy in America thanks to things like Arcadia power and the proliferation of home systems, but proclaims that casting engine blocks is still more intensive than constructing battery banks. I wish Tesla would do one too, but I seriously doubt they ever would.
As for making gasoline out of atmospheric componenets, I wouldn't hold breath. So-called "BluGas" is being worked on by the likes of Porsche, Konisegg and such and has been for the last 10 years; they keep running headfirst into the same problem, that E85 trounces it all because nature is pretty good at energy conservation.
Personally? In the context of the original topic (sports cars) I'm looking for "fun to drive". I enjoy gas engines more than I do EVs, so I'm looking for one of those. :)
Build an eBike I suppose? I've only been in one Tesla but I can totally see how someone would tire of something. Myself, I'm starting small with little 2-wheel and kart like projects, though that hasn't stopped me from crawling through junkyards in search of great forklift AC motors that can be rodded with hacked Priuss inverters and the like.