Tag Archives: electric cars

Elon Musk Is Wrong: Humanity And The Earth Do Not Need EVs, It Need A Carless Society

“In every walk with nature, one receives far more than he seeks.” – John Muir. 

The car did not just change how we move. It changed what we built, what we valued, and who we decided could be left behind. Getting out from under it will require more than a better battery.

In 1956, a city planner in Birmingham, Alabama, submitted a highway routing proposal that would thread the new interstate system directly through Titusville, one of the city’s most prosperous African American neighborhoods. The route was not selected because it was the most efficient path from point A to point B. It was selected because the land was cheap and cheap, in that era, was another word for Black. The families displaced did not receive relocation assistance equal to what they lost. The businesses did not reopen elsewhere. The churches, the insurance offices, the barbershops, the fraternal lodges that had made Titusville a functioning community were scattered. What had been a neighborhood became a slab of elevated concrete moving white commuters from the suburbs to downtown and back. Birmingham was not unusual. From the Tremaine neighborhood in Los Angeles to Rondo in Saint Paul to Overtown in Miami, the same story played out in city after city, funded by the federal government and executed with asphalt. The car did not just reshape American cities. It demolished specific ones, in specific places, inhabited by specific people, for the convenience of everyone else.

This history is the necessary starting point for any honest reckoning with where the automobile has brought us, and why Elon Musk’s vision of an electrified car culture is not a solution to the problem but a continuation of it under a different brand name. The electric vehicle has been marketed as the clean future of personal transportation; zero emissions at the tailpipe, climate guilt absolved, the open road preserved. It is a compelling product. It is not a compelling answer. Because the problem was never just what cars burn. The problem is what cars demand: of land, of household budgets, of city design, of public investment, of the communities that get sacrificed whenever the automobile’s appetite for space needs to be fed.

Start with the land. The United States has devoted more than 100 million acres to automobile infrastructure. Roads and highways alone consume roughly 63,000 square miles of land, an area approximately the size of the state of Florida. In dense cities, up to 40 percent of developable land is given over to streets and parking. Los Angeles has more parking spaces than it has people, with estimates placing the number around 18.6 million spots. That land does not produce food. It does not house families. It does not generate the kind of economic activity that funds schools, libraries, or public health systems. It stores machines that sit idle approximately 95 percent of the time. Every one of those acres is an acre that cannot be a home, a garden, a park, a clinic, or a business. The car does not merely use land. It consumes it, and it consumes it permanently, because once you have built a city around the assumption of universal car ownership, every subsequent decision like where to put the grocery store, where to locate the employer, how wide to make the sidewalk, whether to build a sidewalk at all follows from that original premise. You do not escape the logic by electrifying the vehicle. You just power the prison with renewable energy.

Then there is what cars cost the people who own them. In the United States, the average household spends more than $10,000 per year on vehicle ownership, maintenance, fuel, and insurance. For a working-class family earning $50,000 a year, that is 20 cents of every dollar earned going out the door before groceries, rent, or healthcare are even considered. Car ownership is not, for most Americans, a consumer preference. It is a compelled expense, the price of living in a country that built its cities to require a car for every adult who wants to participate in economic life. You need a car to get to the job. You need the job to afford the car. It is a circular dependency that has been engineered into the physical shape of the American landscape over 70 years of federal highway spending and local zoning codes written to mandate parking minimums and prohibit the kind of density that would make transit viable. An electric vehicle does not break that dependency. It makes it slightly cleaner while keeping it fully intact.

The environmental case against EVs as a solution is equally straightforward, even if it gets less attention than the tailpipe emissions story. Electric vehicles require lithium, cobalt, and rare earth metals extracted from mining operations that carry their own significant environmental and human costs much of it borne by communities in Africa Core and South America with limited political leverage to resist it. EV batteries degrade over time and create toxic disposal challenges that the industry does not yet have a credible plan to manage at scale. The electricity that charges those batteries comes, in large portions of the United States, from natural gas and coal-fired power plants. And the roads those vehicles drive on are made of cement and asphalt, which together represent some of the largest sources of industrial carbon emissions in the construction sector. The electric vehicle reduces the carbon footprint of the vehicle itself. It does not reduce the carbon footprint of the system the vehicle requires to function. Musk is not selling sustainability. He is selling the most expensive component of an unsustainable system and calling it a revolution.

The deeper problem with the EV framework is that it forecloses the conversation we actually need to be having, which is about city design. The countries and cities that have most dramatically reduced their transportation emissions and improved their residents’ quality of life have not done so by switching their car fleets from gasoline to electric. They have done so by building cities where you do not need a car to live a full life. In Amsterdam, nearly 40 percent of all trips are made by bicycle. In Tokyo, the train station is the center of commerce, culture, and daily life not the parking garage. In Bogotá, a citywide investment in bus rapid transit and protected bike infrastructure transformed mobility for millions of people who had never been able to afford a car, electric or otherwise. These are not utopian thought experiments. They are functioning cities with lower transportation costs, lower carbon emissions, lower traffic fatality rates, and measurably higher quality of life by most measures than the car-dependent American metropolitan model.

The concept gaining the most traction in serious urban planning and economic research is the “15-minute city” — an urban environment designed so that work, school, groceries, healthcare, and recreation are all accessible within a 15-minute walk or bike ride from home. The idea sounds simple, but its implications are radical. It requires reversing 70 years of zoning policy that has separated where people live from where they work and shop. It requires investing in transit systems rather than highways. It requires eliminating parking minimums that force developers to build garages instead of apartments. It requires, in other words, making a deliberate decision to build cities for people rather than for the machines people currently have no choice but to use. Every one of those decisions is available to American cities right now. Minneapolis has already eliminated single-family zoning citywide. Several American cities have abolished parking minimums. Raleigh, Sacramento, and Spokane are among those that have begun allowing higher-density housing near transit corridors. The policy tools exist. What has been missing is the political will to use them, and a cultural framework that makes the necessity clear.

The political will question brings us back to Musk, because the EV industry’s dominance of the transportation policy conversation has not been a neutral outcome of superior technology. It has been the result of enormous lobbying investment, enormous marketing spend, and the structurally convenient alignment between the EV industry’s interests and the desires of the affluent consumer class that has historically set the terms of American transportation policy. An EV costs, on average, significantly more than a comparable gasoline vehicle. The federal tax credits designed to incentivize EV adoption have disproportionately benefited households with sufficient income and tax liability to claim them. The charging infrastructure being built to serve EVs is concentrated along highway corridors and in affluent urban neighborhoods, not in the lower-income communities where transportation costs consume the highest share of household income and where the greatest public health benefits from reduced tailpipe emissions would be realized. The EV transition, as currently structured, is a premium product for a premium market, marketed as a solution for everyone.

What would a genuine solution look like? It would look like the $200 billion the United States spends annually on road maintenance being progressively redirected toward transit, protected bike infrastructure, and the land use reforms that make both viable. It would look like parking minimums being eliminated in every American city and the resulting land being converted to housing, urban agriculture, and green space. It would look like the elevated highways that bisected Titusville and Rondo and Overtown being removed as has already happened in San Francisco, Milwaukee, and Seoul and the land beneath them being returned to the communities they displaced. It would look like a federal transportation policy that measures success not in lane-miles of highway constructed but in the percentage of Americans who can get to work, school, and the doctor without owning a vehicle.

None of this requires eliminating every car in America. It requires being honest about what the car has cost us and making different choices with the public money that has, for 70 years, been used to optimize for the automobile at the expense of everything else. The planet is not in danger because we drive gasoline-powered cars. It is in danger because we built an entire civilization on the assumption that every adult would own and operate a private motor vehicle, and then constructed a global economy to supply, fuel, insure, park, and repair that vehicle in perpetuity. Swapping the engine type does not change the assumption. It just makes it quieter.

Elon Musk is not a visionary in any meaningful sense of that word when it comes to transportation. He is a very effective entrepreneur (we think) who has identified a product that allows affluent consumers to feel better about a behavior they were already committed to. That is a legitimate business. It is absolutely not a solution to climate change, to urban inequality, to the destruction of walkable communities, or to the 40,000 Americans who die in traffic collisions every year. Those problems require something the EV industry cannot sell: a different way of organizing the relationship between human beings and the places they inhabit. That reorganization begins not in a factory in Texas but in a city council chamber, a zoning board hearing, a transit agency budget meeting, and the accumulated small decisions about what we build, where we build it, and who we decide it is for. The age of the car will end. The only question is whether we end it deliberately, on terms we choose, or whether we wait for the consequences of not choosing to end it for us.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

HBCU Money™ Dozen 11/23 – 11/27

numbers12

Did you miss HBCU Money™ Dozen via Twitter? No worry. We are now putting them on the site for you to visit at your leisure. We have made some changes here at HBCU Money™ Dozen. We are now solely focused on research and central bank articles from the previous week.

Research

Developers are trying to teach Apple Pencil new tricks l Macworld http://dlvr.it/CqkTNM

Giant sea worms the size of whales? What else will we discover in the ocean? l XPrize http://ow.ly/V2lco

How an ocean-health report card helps better manage fish l Pew Environment http://pew.org/1NM4v75

3D printing can recreate your vascular system for pre-op practice l CIOonline http://trib.al/SnOAi40

U.S. farm sector profitability expected to weaken in 2015 l USDA http://go.usa.gov/cjEsG

The Autowende Is Here: Electric Cars Are The Next Trillion Dollar Industry l Clean Technica http://dlvr.it/CqgsMq

Federal Reserve, Central Banks, & Financial Departments

Lack of legal ID often sidelines #women from electoral processes l World Bank http://wrld.bg/UTRAi

How high can the #US minimum wage go? l World Economic Forum http://wef.ch/1HjPBs7

Loan Growth is Up, So Why Is Profitability Down? l CU Journal http://bit.ly/1XoYVwu

[Chart] Is there a housing bubble brewing on the West Coast? l Housing Wire http://bit.ly/1lHWOrX

How is politics affected by financial crises? l World Economic Forum http://wef.ch/1YrRsiM

Household Debt & Credit Report now includes 2 charts showing auto loan originations by credit score l NY Fed http://nyfed.org/1HbhOBi

Thank you as always for joining us on Saturday for HBCU Money™ Dozen. The 12 most important research and finance articles of the week.

HBCU Money™ Dozen 10/6 – 10/10

MDM_12-12-2012_ROP_03_candles_t460

Did you miss HBCU Money™ Dozen via Twitter? No worry. We are now putting them on the site for you to visit at your leisure. We have made some changes here at HBCU Money™ Dozen. We are now solely focused on research and central bank articles from the previous week.

Research

Hard drives can be wiped. DVDs degrade. So do like Superman and save memories in glass shards l New Scientist http://ow.ly/Cw4J3

Hidden gems: 10 Python tools too good to overlook l Infoworld http://ow.ly/Cw4Ud

Lameness is most common problem in endurance riding l KY Equine Research http://ow.ly/Cw53o

200-Mile Electric Car Confirmed By GM l Clean Technica http://dlvr.it/78d3W6

Teach Kids the Triple R’s (of review, refresh and remind) – a mantra as part of their asthma plan l US EPA http://ow.ly/Cw5uQ

An inside look at Russian cybercriminals l CSOonlinehttp://ow.ly/Cw5Jy

Federal Reserve, Central Banks, & Financial Departments

Students in our Keys program gain over 60% in their personal finance knowledge l Philly Fed http://ow.ly/Cw5Xx

Cost to rent rising faster than home prices l Housing Wire http://hwi.re/78dVVw

Wells Fargo reaches $5M settlement over maternity discrimination l Housing Wire http://hwi.re/78ZzY8

What can we learn from the grassroots fight against Ebola? l World Economic Forum http://wef.ch/1w1dAkL

How real is the African growth miracle? l World Economic Forum http://wef.ch/1w0PIhi

Should we be concerned about the economic impact of immigration on native U.S. labor? l St. Louis Fed http://bit.ly/1rQbcyn

Thank you as always for joining us on Saturday for HBCU Money™ Dozen. The 12 most important research and finance articles of the week.

HBCU Money™ Dozen 9/1 – 9/5

12images

Did you miss HBCU Money™ Dozen via Twitter? No worry. We are now putting them on the site for you to visit at your leisure. We have made some changes here at HBCU Money™ Dozen. We are now solely focused on research and central bank articles from the previous week.

Research

Code generation: Kids who program before they can read l New Scientist http://ow.ly/B965L

US Electric Car Sales Report: Nissan LEAF Hits Record, BMW i3 Rises Fast l Clean Technica http://dlvr.it/6qKssK

Home Automation’s Next Big Opportunity: Controlling the Water Heater l CIOonline http://trib.al/8ocpJkt

Importance of minerals and protein for bone formation in horses l KY Equine Research http://ow.ly/B98Zk

College Students! Got ideas for sustainable eco-friendly tech solutions? Apply for a grant l EPA Research http://go.usa.gov/yAZx

TV networks are tapping into your personal data to show you ads based on your voting record l New Scientist http://ow.ly/B9bfG

Federal Reserve, Central Banks, & Financial Departments

Report examining small business success references Small Business Financial Health Initiative l SF Fed http://bit.ly/1Cr9Jmh

Here are the states with the priciest homes for sale l Housing Wire http://hwi.re/6qJKmZ

75% increase in Rwanda’s tourism due to the increase in tourists from other African countries l World Bank http://wrld.bg/AZPnD

How did a colonial trade crisis push forward thinking about monetary policy? l NY Fed http://nyfed.org/1t8HQbT

Mexico holds rate on better balance of economic risks l Central Bank News http://dlvr.it/6qHMxn

How is technology changing the global economy? l WEF http://wef.ch/1pwFfoF

Thank you as always for joining us on Saturday for HBCU Money™ Dozen. The 12 most important research and finance articles of the week.

HBCU Money™ Dozen 2/17 – 2/21

12th-Man-Flag-010613-Sized-Digi

Did you miss HBCU Money™ Dozen via Twitter? No worry. We are now putting them on the site for you to visit at your leisure. We have made some changes here at HBCU Money™ Dozen. We are now solely focused on research and central bank articles from the previous week.

Research

Three essentials steps to a software defined data center l Network World ow.ly/tQ5Lz

Brain cell regeneration has been discovered in a new location in human brains l New Scientist ow.ly/tQ63h

Did you know shellfish #aquaculture can reduce nitrogen loading? l NOAA Sea Grant bit.ly/1oWUevE

Three years after Japanese tsunami, invasive species are still a threat l Oregon Sea Grant ow.ly/tQ6hs

US, Brazil meet at the Livermore Lab to collaborate in #science & #technology l Livermore Lab 1.usa.gov/1jMmg9d

The Other #1 Reason Why Electric Cars Will Dominate The Car Market l Clean Technica dlvr.it/4zFQfH

Federal Reserve, Central Banks, & Financial Departments

How did central banks come into being? A look at early public banks l Chicago Fed ow.ly/tQ7Ka

SouthPoint looks at winter’s short-term effects on the regional economy l Atlanta Fed goo.gl/RrdgP2

Asia investors bullish about private real estate l Housing Wire hwi.re/4zPRkt

See how your state’s economic education requirements stack up l Council 4 Econ Ed ow.ly/tQ8i9

Impact of 2005 bankruptcy reform on the number of bankruptcies during the Great Recession l St. Louis Fed bit.ly/1gGP8jl

The real estate 1% and the S&P 500 are secretly connected l Housing Wire hwi.re/4zLVx7

Thank you as always for joining us on Saturday for HBCU Money™ Dozen. The 12 most important research and finance articles of the week.