The internal combustion engine had a good run. It has helped propel cars — and thus humanity — forward for more than 100 years.
But a sea change is afoot that is forecast to kick gas-powered vehicles to the curb, replacing them with cars that run on batteries. A flurry of news this week underscores just how rapidly that change could happen.
Robots at the Tesla factory in Fremont, Calif. put together electric cars. Credit: Tesla Motors |
All this news dropped just in time for Bloomberg New Energy Finance’s latest electric car report, which lays out why electric cars are the way of the future and when they’re projected to take over the market. The authors said although electric vehicles are currently a tiny fraction of the car market, that market could reach an inflection point sometime between 2025-2030. After that, electric car sales are slated to increase rapidly.
Driven by the falling cost of batteries and the growing number of automakers producing a wider variety of electric cars, Bloomberg NEF expects that electric cars will account for 54 percent of all car sales globally by 2040. That’s a huge uptick from its forecast last year of electric vehicles accounting for 35 percent of all sales.
The shift to electric vehicles will disrupt the fossil fuel industry. The 530 million total electric cars forecast to be on the road by 2040 will require 8 million fewer barrels of oil a day to run.
A new forecast for electric cars shows explosive growth in new sales, particularly in China. Credit: Bloomberg NEF |
One
of the big pitches for electric cars is their positive benefit for the
climate because they reduce the use of oil. But they will require a lot
more power from the electric grid. Energy use from electric vehicles is
expected to rise 300 times above current demand, putting more strain on
power generation.
How that energy is produced will go a long ways toward determining how climate-friendly electric cars actually are. A recent Climate Central analysis
looked at all 50 states and found that the energy mix was clean enough
in 37 of them to ensure electric cars are more climate friendly than
their most fuel-efficient combustion engine counterparts.That’s a sharp uptick from a 2013 analysis, which found that there were just 13 states where electric cars were cleaner than gas-powered ones, and it’s driven in large part by a precipitous drop in coal use.
While the U.S. is projected to be one of the biggest drivers of the electric vehicle revolution, China and the European Union will also be major players. By 2025, Bloomberg NEF’s projections show that China will be the biggest buyer of electric vehicles in the world, a trend that continues through 2040.
That means how China’s energy mix develops will be one of the most important factors to determining how climate friendly all the new electric vehicles on the road will be.
Links
- Electric Cars Becoming Popular As Grid Gets Greener
- States Betting on Giant Batteries to Cut Carbon
- A New Kind of Car Guide
- Scientists Know How Big the Larsen C Iceberg Will Be
- This Is How Climate Change Will Shift the World’s Cities
- Global Warming Tipped Scales in Europe’s Heat Wave
- Climate Change Will Hit the Poorest the Hardest in the U.S.
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