![]() |
From: gm-volt.com |
Also known as the ARU. Principal researcher: John Norris. Associate researcher: waiting submissions
Saturday, 29 January 2011
Chevy Volt: 1000+ mpg?
From the dashboard of a Chevy Volt owner: 531 miles using 0.5 gallon (US) of petrol. Nice.
Wednesday, 26 January 2011
Sunday, 2 January 2011
Declining cost of battery storage
Green Car Congress cites a Deutsche Bank (DB) study predicting more efficient internal combustion engines (ICE) in the short term, with more electric vehicles (EVs) in the long term. DB is optimistic about the future of EVs, observing that laptop batteries (used to power Tesla's Roadster and maybe Audi's forthcoming eTron) have fallen in cost from $2,000 per kWh fifteen years ago to $250 per kWh today. That is equivalent to a CAGR of -13.8% (see graph). If this trend continues, battery costs will be $57/kWh in 2020.
Note the standard laptop battery (cell) is known as an 18650 based on its dimensions: 18mm diameter x 65mm in length.
Saturday, 1 January 2011
Food miles
Does local equal better? Not always...
- British tomato growers emit 2.4 metric tons of carbon dioxide for each ton of tomatoes grown compared to 0.6 tons of carbon dioxide for each ton of Spanish tomatoes
- cold storage of British apples produced more carbon dioxide than shipping New Zealand apples by sea to London.
- U.K. dairy farmers use twice as much energy to produce a metric ton of milk solids than do New Zealand farmers.
- Kenyan cut rose growers emit 6 metric tons of carbon dioxide per 12,000 roses compared to the 35 tons of carbon dioxide emitted by their Dutch competitors.
My view: a carbon tax or cap and trade would sort this out; the assumption that local is better is probably counter-productive.
PS: Amory Lovins is working with Wal-Mart to double the mpg of big trucks like the one pictured above.
Friday, 31 December 2010
Cell count
![]() |
3D rendered image of translucent cells dividing |
Our bodies contain approximately 10 quadrillion cells (10 x 10^15). In addition, we are host to a further 100 quadrillion bacterial cells.
Each of our cells (well, over 99.99% of them at least) contain a string of DNA almost 2 metres long with 3.2 billion base pairs (where a base is one of adenine (abbreviated A), cytosine (C), guanine (G) and thymine (T)).
Each cell typically contains twenty thousand different types of protein and a minimum of 100 million protein molecules.
From: Bill Bryson: A Short History of Nearly Everything
Wednesday, 29 December 2010
Oil Sands
![]() |
Fort McMurray Oil Sands, Canada |
From Wikipedia:
However, the world's largest [oil sands] deposits occur in two countries: Canada and Venezuela, each of which has oil sand reserves approximately equal to the world's total reserves of conventional crude oil.In numbers:
Conventional crude reserves: 1.75 trillion barrels
Canadian + Venezuelan oil sand reserves: 3.6 trillion barrels
It isn't clear if these reserves are those at a given price, eg today's $90 per barrel, or not.
Wednesday, 22 December 2010
Nissan Leaf calculations
Wikipedia: Under its five-cycle testing, the United States Environmental Protection Agency found the Leaf's energy consumption to be 765 kJ/km (34 kWh/100 miles)
This is 340Wh/mile. A 1x1m solar panel in Aberystwyth yields about 200 kWh/year at 20% efficiency (200 / 0.34 = 588 miles). So 6,000 miles a year in a Nissan Leaf would require about 10m2 of solar panels.
The SAP calculator gives a 2.4kWp system for 2,000 kWh/year. At Solarbuzz prices of €3.09 per watt this is about €7.4k for modules, say €14.8k installed. This is about £12.5k at today's exchange rate. With a FIT of 41p/kWh this is an approx 15 year payback. Solarbuzz also shows cheapest module price in Germany of €1.56. Again doubling for installation, this would give about a 7.5 year payback.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)