reserves
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I think this is more realistic to the future direction. My only concern is the safety aspect having dealt with high pressure hydrogen.
Are you scientist or an engineer?
I have never understood why people make comments like this. The view that it presents is bleak, so no one could enjoy saying these things, but the mystery is even weirder because it's not accurate.
Some electric car batteries which have reached the end of their useful lives in cars are recycled using new technologies, and that will increase, but most are currently having their still impressive capabilities repurposed as storage for individual domestic and small business net zero solar systems. These batteries are turning out to be a god send for medical clinics in third world countries who use solar to power their medical equipment because there is no local electric network in their remote zones. That's just one of the uses that is currently booming. Imaginative people are finding uses for well beyond the amount of second hand batteries currently available.
Why do people feel driven to say this technology will fail, when there is real time evidence that it is already succeeding in ways that weren't even imagined a few years ago? It seems clear to me that it is a sort of psychological trauma some people experience because of the rate of change of almost everything, as was written about years ago in the game changing book "Future Shock." This book was a study of why many people can't assimilate improvements from which they objectively benefit.
Where Electric Car Batteries Go When They Die
More companies and carmakers are getting in on recycling to save costs.www.autoweek.com
Future Shock - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Edit: When I was a conservatory student in the 1970s, I rented a room in the home of a 91 year old retired concert pianist. She was not disabled in any way, and once a week she drove her Buick over the Northern California coastal mountains from the rural village of 800 people where we lived to visit her friends in San Francisco. I asked her once what it was like to have lived a life which spanned such profound change. In answer, she said that, for context, she had come to this same village as a young girl with her father in a stage coach.
If she could deal with the future without rejecting it from future shock, so can we.
Always good to see a post based on knowledge and facts.
It’s sad how much FUD there is around electric cars but generally people are naturally resistant to change.