It's the same for any car legally sold in America
No. You can buy unsafe crap in Oklahoma that won’t be registrable in California.It's the same for any car legally sold in America
I'm sure they will be up to California standards and those of all 50 states, made in Mexico under free trade, perhaps sold under GM or Ford's name in some cases.No. You can buy unsafe crap in Oklahoma that won’t be registrable in California.
Not for anything like $5k.I'm sure they will be up to California standards and those of all 50 states, made in Mexico under free trade, perhaps sold under GM or Ford's name in some cases.
I like my car.It's not that I'm skeptical about this transportation as a service idea and I'm sure many will use it, bars and restaurants that serve alcohol might like the idea too and it could lead to a revival for them. However, a car is a personal thing with many people and if they can own a future EV one on a whim for $5K many will, beats the bus and that might be the idea here, but buses move people more efficiently than EVs, can be electric, and parking is an issue for many. A transportation as a service thing could pick you up and drop you off at work, same in the evening, if traffic and demand wasn't an issue with everybody doing the same thing at the same time during rush hours.
The idea of the oil companies being out of business by 2030 seems a bit absurd, but they could be feeling the heat by then. The idea of a $5,000 EV in 2030 sounds absurd too, but they sell small ones cheaper than that in China today and batteries are getting better and cheaper while more robots are involved in production, and everything can be powered by renewables. China could get in through Mexico and free trade with assembly and battery factories there, labor is cheap too. A few years ago, the idea of solar being the cheapest form of power generation was absurd too. I try to keep an open mind.
Electric vehicles will kill global oil industry by 2030, says Stanford economist Tony Seba - The American Energy News
Will the emerging electric vehicle "transportation as a service" business model kill the global oil industry in 10 years? Tony Seba thinks it will.theamericanenergynews.com
In 2030 if you own your own cheap EV and have solar at home, then your transportation is free, except for maintenance on the EV and when they get that fucking cheap, ($5K) they will be nearly disposable! What happens if you need to get to work and someone barfed in the car you called the night before while loaded drunk! There will be issues, large numbers of assholes roam wild...I like my car.
However if transportation as a service is cheaper, I’m in.
The wrinkle is, my car is fully amortized. Operating costs are correspondingly lower. That’s the target they need to hit.
If there is no cheap California-registrable ev in 6 yearsIn 2030 if you own your own cheap EV and have solar at home, then your transportation is free, except for maintenance on the EV and when they get that fucking cheap, ($5K) they will be nearly disposable! What happens if you need to get to work and someone barfed in the car you called the night before while loaded drunk! There will be issue, large numbers of assholes roam wild...
These are the kinds of ideas that I love hearing about; they don't require an obscene level of investment to get started and can be very beneficial even if done on a very small scale. This doesn't involve getting an entire new industry established and should face substantially less resistance from existing water purification corporations as it isn't destroying an existing market, yet.This is a very neat and important idea and seems to produce a lot of fresh water cheaply with solar energy. It looks like it can be engineered better and scaled to significant size near the seashore. After a couple of iterations to improve production and engineering to scale it to utility size, they might be onto something and could sell lots of them to the Saudis and other such places with a lot of cash. Using no energy to efficiently desalinate large amounts of water economically can make a big difference for people and the environment. It might enable limited agriculture in some dry places with efficient irrigation and hydroponics systems.
California here I come! Since it works in the day, solar PV can pump salt water to it miles inland to a cheap site and it drains back. Likewise solar PV can pump freshwater hundreds of miles inland with a pipeline or canal covered in solar panels. It also doesn't produce polluting brine, a good selling feature. Think hundreds or thousands of square meters of these panels in a more advanced design, perhaps using solar PV to enhance production further.
"The heart of the team’s new design is a single stage that resembles a thin box, topped with a dark material that efficiently absorbs the heat of the sun". That might be a solar PV panel of some sort... If it cools the solar panel as the top layer too, it's a marriage made for the desert coasts, power and water from the same facility. What would be the effect of concentrating solar on it with mirrors, say an extra square meter or two of extra sunlight per cell?
From these tests, the researchers calculated that if each stage were scaled up to a square meter, it would produce up to 5 liters of drinking water per hour, and that the system could desalinate water without accumulating salt for several years. Given this extended lifetime, and the fact that the system is entirely passive, requiring no electricity to run, the team estimates that the overall cost of running the system would be cheaper than what it costs to produce tap water in the United States.
Desalination system could produce freshwater that is cheaper than tap water
A new solar desalination system takes in saltwater and heats it with natural sunlight. The system flushes out accumulated salt, so replacement parts aren’t needed often, meaning the system could potentially produce drinking water that is cheaper than tap water.news.mit.edu
Unlimited Fresh Water: Can MIT's Breakthrough Save Us?
This video is an exploration into a resent rabbit hole I went down. I read about MIT's new desalination breakthrough on Reddit, and needed to learn more! The topic of desalination is an important one that is only becoming more critical and could be a lifeline for huge area of the world. As well as looking at the breakthrough, this video also touches on classical methods (multi-stage distillation and reverse osmosis) and a case study of where this could be used, Kiribati.
It is such a good idea it can work at multiple scales, from small to very big operations.These are the kinds of ideas that I love hearing about; they don't require an obscene level of investment to get started and can be very beneficial even if done on a very small scale. This doesn't involve getting an entire new industry established and should face substantially less resistance from existing water purification corporations as it isn't destroying an existing market, yet.