Monday, 11 August 2014

Powered By Lithium: Calculate the Cost to Drive an Electric Car.

  


  Among many other questions we have discussed on this blog, the economic benefits of electric cars are among the most important for them to take our roads in numbers by storm. Now you can easily calculate your own economic incentive of being green:



Elon Musk With Tesla Gigafactory Starts The Race To Secure Supply Of Lithium Batteries And Lithium.




 "I would like to share with you the very interesting summary from  Seeking Apha on this subject. It confirms my personal observations of the investment and M&A trends in our Lithium industry today. I will share with you few quotes and links which will help you to understand International Lithium strategy and, what is very important, how our strategic partner Ganfeng Lithium sees this megatrends from the ground of the world's biggest auto market in the world in China. Read more"


Powered by Lithium: Clean Electric Cars - Renewables to Get Most of $7.7 Trillion Power Investments


Is Tesla, Apple and Foxconn A Match Made In Heaven To Make Electric Apple iCar Under $15k?




Lithium Catalyst: Hydrogen Dreams And Write-down Of Two-thirds Of US Shale Oil Explodes Fracking Myth.



No Danger From Magnetic Fields In Electric Cars As Their Sales Have Doubled Every Year For Three Years.



and why it all matters to you:

Peak Oil Is Back! - IEA Write-down Of Two-thirds Of US Shale Oil Explodes Fracking Myth.





ECT.coop:

Calculate the Cost to Drive an Electric Car


By Michael W. Kahn | ECT Staff WriterPublished: August 8th, 2014
So you’re thinking about buying an electric car, but can’t help wonder whether you’ll really be saving money.  A new online tool helps you figure out what the cost to drive from point A to point B in any four vehicles, whether they’re gasoline-fueled, pure electric or plug-in hybrids. 
The EV Explorer is the brainchild of the Institute of Transportation Studies at the University of California, Davis. 
“Just enter your start and finish commute locations and frequency of travel, and the yearly energy costs for the four vehicles will instantly appear side-by-side,” Michael Nicholas, lead researcher at the institute’s Plug-in Hybrid and Electric Vehicle Research Center, wrote in a blog post. 
The EV Explorer can compare cars as new as model year 2015 and as old as 1984. It allows users to enter several variables, including the kilowatt-hour price they pay for electricity, the local cost of gasoline, and how frequently they make the trip. 
“You can even specify the location of a public charging station you use and its charging price to get an accurate cost for public charger use,” Nicholas added.
ECT.coop put the EV Explorer to the test on two staff commutes. 
One is a 34-mile roundtrip, made five days a week in a 2010 Toyota Yaris. Figuring gasoline at $3.43 per gallon, and a Dominion Virginia Power rate of 7 cents per kilowatt-hour, with all charging done at home, the EV Explorer calculated that: 
• The annual gasoline cost for the Yaris is $856
• Making the trip in a 2014 Toyota Prius plug-in hybrid (PHEV) would cost $418 ($359 in gas and $59 in electricity)
• The commute in a 2014 Chevrolet Volt PHEV would cost $217 strictly for electricity
• The commute in an all-electric 2014 Nissan Leaf would cost $186
ECT.coop then looked at a second staffer commuting 77 miles roundtrip, five days a week, in a 2005 Acura RL. He pays $3.95 for high-octane gas, and as a member of Southern Maryland Electric Cooperative pays about 10 cents per kwh. With all charging done at home, EV Explorer determined that: 
• The annual gasoline cost for the Acura is $3,162
• A 2014 Chevy Volt PHEV would cut that to $1,169 ($823 for gas and $346 for electricity)
• In a 2014 Toyota Prius PHEV the cost would fall to $1,113 ($1,030 for gas and $83 for electricity)
• The all-electric Nissan Leaf would get the cost down to $601 
“Even though it was designed for California and the United States, it can work anywhere in the world, by finding a close fuel economy match to any of the more than 34,000 vehicles in the fueleconomy.gov database and, of course, by converting to metric,” Nicholas noted. ECT.coop."

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