A study in this week’s Scientific Report by researchers at
Michigan State University (MSU) and in China add more fuel to the
already hot debate about whether electric vehicles are more
environmentally friendly than conventional vehicles by uncovering two
hidden benefits.
They show that the cool factor is real – in that
electric vehicles emit significantly less heat. That difference could
mitigate the urban heat island effect, the phenomenon that helps turn
big cities like Beijing into pressure cookers in warm months.
Moreover,
the cooling resulting from replacing all gas-powered vehicles with
electric vehicles could mean city dwellers needing less air
conditioning, another environmental win.
“It’s easy not to see the
big picture on issues like electric cars and global warming, but when
we look with a holistic approach, we find these unexpected connections,”
said co-author Jianguo “Jack” Liu,
who holds the Rachel Carson Chair in Sustainability at MSU and is
director of the Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability
(CSIS). “Heat waves kill, and in terms of climate change, even one
degree can make a difference.”
The research was led by Professor
Canbing Li of Hunan University in Changsha, China, who was a visiting
scholar at CSIS. The electric vehicles’ benefits of reduced greenhouse
gas emissions are countered by the expense and pollution from producing
the vehicles, leading to debate on whether they are the best replacement
for conventional vehicles.
In the paper, Li and his colleagues
take a wider view to find new positives for plug-ins. Conventional
vehicles and air conditioners are the two biggest contributors to the
heat island intensity – the difference between urban temperatures and
the cooler temperatures of rural areas. In that arena, electric
vehicles are cooler – giving off only about 20 percent of the heat a gas
vehicle emits.
The researchers used Beijing in summer of 2012 to
calculate that switching vehicles from gas to electricity could reduce
the heat island intensity by nearly 1 degree Celsius. That would have
saved Beijing 14.4 million kilowatt hours and slashed carbon dioxide
emissions by 11,779 tons per day, according to the paper “Hidden
Benefits of Electric Vehicles for Addressing Climate Change.”
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