Diesels Are A Public Health Issue But We Need To Slow Down The Switch To Electric

It's the height of European legislative fashion right now to act against diesels, but between the rushed advances of lawmakers and legislators, problems are emerging
Diesels Are A Public Health Issue But We Need To Slow Down The Switch To Electric

Diesels are up against it. Europe’s largest car-making group is already turning against them, with the most of the Volkswagen Group portfolio already making noises about ditching the fuel altogether and switching to electric power as soon as humanly possible. Blame dieselgate, or even blame your neighbour’s dog, if you like. It doesn’t matter.

We’re going to be without diesels soon, and without their benefits, but I’m not sure it’s fair to be bashing diesels the way it looks like the authorities are about to. Sure, we at CT generally prefer petrol anyway, but it still doesn’t seem right to simply sweep the rug out from under people’s feet.

There’s a growing swell in the industry; a sense of urgency directed straight at diesels, or rather at their demise. The legislators are making sudden moves, the manufacturers are bringing forward their production timescales for fully-electric cars, and Audi even cancelled its diesel-fuelled Le Mans racing programme.

Diesels Are A Public Health Issue But We Need To Slow Down The Switch To Electric

But no thought has thus far been given to the diesel-driving consumer; the humble punter who quite likes his or her longer fuel tank range, higher miles-per-gallon return and lower (on the old system, anyway) road tax payments. What about the guy on the street whose diesel hatchback’s market value is apparently going to hit the rocks hard?

This focus on stick could use a bit of carrot to go with it. A diesel scrappage scheme has been mooted. The Express seems to think it’s likely, but the Express has also been predicting the end of the world as we know it for the last few decades, from ‘snow bombs’, extremist invasions and 50-degree heatwaves that will turn everything to ash. So let’s not get too carried away with the newspaper’s talk of £8500 incentives.

But, if there’s a grain of truth, it’s a positive step. The danger as things stand is that millions of people will be left out of pocket. Given how well the 2009 scrappage scheme worked, shifting 392,227 old bangers off the streets, it’s a sure-fire way to get people out of diesels.

The truth is that the public needs an incentive. We rightly feel a bit miffed. After all, we’ve been coaxed into buying diesels for the last decade and a half, because of their lower carbon dioxide output and lower road tax payments, only to be told today that diesels are actually the Devil’s children and their drivers should all be shot. Sound fair? No, it doesn’t.

The EU parliament has to take a large share of the responsibility for not really thinking the problem through in the first place, when they decided that CO2 was the big deal we should all worry about. Now the public is facing another problem not of its own design, in that the technologies we’re expected to move to simply aren’t ready yet. The wider public isn’t ready to accept the limitations of scraping 100 miles of range from each multi-hour charge. The infrastructure isn’t there yet in the UK or the US, and anecdotal evidence suggests the charging points aren’t as reliable as they need to be.

Diesels Are A Public Health Issue But We Need To Slow Down The Switch To Electric

The manufacturers and the legislators want cities to be diesel-free by as soon as 2025. I’m not sure how practical that really is. More time is needed to let the changes filter through, and to let battery technology develop to where we need it to be. Newer, better lithium-ion battery tech is being pioneered, with Volkswagen’s I.D. concept said to be capable of 250 miles even on a bad day, but have we really got the time to bring it to production, test it in the real world, iron out all the bugs and install hundreds of thousands of charging points, all in eight years? I can’t see it.

The electric advance is being rushed forwards in the wake of dieselgate, and when projects this complex are rushed, important factors get overlooked or pushed to the back burner. We’re going to be asked to accept electric technology, and the end of diesel, before either we, or the technology itself, is really ready. And my gut says that it’s not a good idea.

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Comments

Anonymous

Government being savage

04/09/2017 - 16:07 |
0 | 0
MKM099

Is it possible to have manual transmission in electeic cars?

04/09/2017 - 16:10 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by MKM099

Yes but most if not all will put cvt type

04/09/2017 - 21:52 |
0 | 0
Diego Tului

In reply to by MKM099

it is technically possible but pointless, since there’s no need for a gearbox altogether, given that electric motors have always max torque and the rpm range is waaay wider than any internal combustion engine…

04/10/2017 - 08:19 |
0 | 0
Cesare "Il Valentino" Borgia

Gasoline hybrids and biofuel hybrids are the way forward. Something where the engine will charge the battery instead of your house since most electricity is generated from burning coal anyways (at least in the US).

04/09/2017 - 17:43 |
3 | 0
Zanzaroni

You said it coal, that is required fir energy needed to create thise batteries, huge amounts are required for a plant to work every day and then there is transport, batteries are not produced everywhere and many fossil fuels are burnt just for their transport from production plants to the car manufacturers for assembly, either by truck, ship or aeroplane. The latter is the most efficient but also the least preffered as cost grow expendentially compared to the otber options for the same kind of freight, also you have to consider the already great amounts of coal needed to create electricity, required to keep supplying those batterirs with energy

04/09/2017 - 20:20 |
0 | 0
lowie t

Less diesels. No please
More electric. No please

04/09/2017 - 20:27 |
6 | 0
Anonymous

Nobody seems to remember most vans, lorries and towing vehicles are diesel…. For a reason…the towing capacity is far better and electric is nowhere near, what about these vehicles?

04/09/2017 - 20:29 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

well torque is not going to be the problem in the least. But how on god’s earth are they going to haul all that cargo over thousands of kms.

04/09/2017 - 22:07 |
3 | 0
InjunS2K

But, but, how are you going to drive 400 miles nonstop while hauling a trailer full of things?

04/10/2017 - 03:14 |
2 | 0
7367Network

I hope Volkswagen won’t have an “electricgate”

04/10/2017 - 08:11 |
1 | 2
HDose

I think I should startup a company researching clean diesel. Insert that cat photo here

04/10/2017 - 14:41 |
0 | 0
G coffey

In reply to by HDose

Retro fit scalextrix motors on the rear axle and call it a ‘diesel hybrid’

04/10/2017 - 16:01 |
0 | 0
G coffey

So all the electricity needed for EVs will come from?
Motorway services are going to be even busier with swarms of prius ‘fart sniffing’ drivers waiting hours for their cars to recharge, assuming the charge points are working.
At least as the fart lovers plug their evs to charge at night, triggering rolling black outs, i’ll be fine driving my 6.2l v8 round the empty streets.

04/10/2017 - 15:51 |
1 | 0