<p>Sceptics say that far from helping save the planet, electric cars are a liberal pipe-dream whose environmental benefits are exaggerated.</p>.<p>But even if there is no such thing as an all-green car, studies show that battery-powered ones cause fewer harmful greenhouse gas overall than their petrol-driven ancestors.</p>.<p><em>AFP </em>Fact Check examined three common claims about them.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/battery-swapping-key-to-future-of-e-auto-rickshaws-in-india-1107569.html" target="_blank">Battery Swapping: Key to future of e-auto rickshaws in India</a></strong></p>.<p>"Coal Powered Electric Cars.... Helping liberals pretend they are solving a make-believe crisis," reads a text shared on Facebook, with a photo of cars plugged in at a charging station.</p>.<p>The humorous meme implies that electric cars do not help lower climate-changing greenhouse gas emissions because coal is burned to feed the electricity grid.</p>.<p>The US Environmental Protection Agency has a calculator tool on its website to compare a petrol car's emissions with those of an electric one depending on where it is charged.</p>.<p>It calculates that an electric car charged in St Louis, Missouri -- part of the subregion that relies the most on coal -- on average will produce 247 grams of carbon dioxide per mile, lower than the average 381 grams of a gasoline vehicle.</p>.<p>Experts at Carbon Brief agree an electric car's emissions depend on what region or country it is charged in.</p>.<p>They would be higher in Poland or in an Asian country where more coal is burned than in France, where most electricity comes from nuclear power.</p>.<p>Overall, the International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT) found electric cars are lower-emitting than their petrol-driven equivalents across their life cycle, from mining components to recycling.</p>.<p>An electric car is also much more efficient in its use of energy than a petrol-powered one, according to the US Department of Energy and other sources.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/beyond-electric-cars-how-electrifying-trucks-buses-tractors-and-scooters-will-help-tackle-climate-change-1106036.html" target="_blank">Beyond electric cars: How electrifying trucks, buses, tractors and scooters will help tackle climate change</a></strong></p>.<p>Making the vehicles' batteries is an energy-intensive process that includes mining and trucking raw materials, assembly in factories, and shipping worldwide. Recycling them is costly.</p>.<p>Another viral text shared on Facebook claimed that 500,000 pounds (227 metric tonnes) of the earth are dug up to extract the metals for one electric car battery.</p>.<p>The estimate appeared to originate from a 2020 analysis by the Manhattan Institute, a climate-sceptic research group.</p>.<p>Several experts consulted by <em>AFP </em>said the figures were misleading. Peter Newman, professor of sustainability at Australia's Curtin University, judged it a "gross exaggeration" and said the quantity mined would vary depending on geography and the type of battery.</p>.<p>Mining has other impacts not immediately related to the global climate. About 70 per cent of cobalt -- a battery ingredient -- comes from the Democratic Republic of Congo, where use of child labour in mines has been documented.</p>.<p>Access to the ingredients also raises strategic supply concerns, with many of the raw materials held by China, according to the International Energy Agency.</p>.<p>Georg Bieker, a Berlin-based researcher at the ICCT, said the environmental damage from oil drilling made gasoline production no better.</p>.<p>The risk of devastation driven by greenhouse gas emissions, projected in recent reports by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, would be even worse.</p>.<p>"It is correct to demand improvements, e.g. as considered by voluntary standards in the industry and by mandatory due diligence requirements that are foreseen in the upcoming EU battery regulation," he said.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/e-scooters-in-flames-show-high-cost-of-indias-green-goals-1104916.html" target="_blank">E-scooters in flames show high cost of India's green goals</a></strong></p>.<p>"In any case, it's clear that the social and environmental impact of global warming is catastrophic, at a different scale than the mining of battery raw materials."</p>.<p>After a snowstorm stranded hundreds of motorists in Virginia in January, users on Facebook shared posts warning that electric vehicles would run out of power and make the traffic jam even worse.</p>.<p>"All those people would be stuck in freezing temperatures without a heated vehicle. And all the cars would be stuck unable to move because you can't bring a charging station to them," read the text.</p>.<p>"All those electric cars would become roadblocks to the gasoline-powered vehicles."</p>.<p>Several fact-checking organisations scrutinised the claim. They found there was no evidence that electric cars would fare worse in a storm.</p>.<p>Studies such as one published in 2015 by the American Chemical Society have found that electric vehicles do consume energy less efficiently when driving in the cold.</p>.<p>However various experts said that if stuck in a storm, an electric vehicle would consume less power than a gasoline one, which would have to keep its engine running to power the heating.</p>.<p>British consumer affairs magazine Which? tested an electric SUV by simulating a traffic jam, with the car's radio, air conditioning, seat-heating and headlights on, plus a tablet device plugged in playing a film.</p>.<p>That used up a negligible two per cent of the battery, or eight miles' worth of range, in an hour and a quarter - admittedly in summer conditions.</p>
<p>Sceptics say that far from helping save the planet, electric cars are a liberal pipe-dream whose environmental benefits are exaggerated.</p>.<p>But even if there is no such thing as an all-green car, studies show that battery-powered ones cause fewer harmful greenhouse gas overall than their petrol-driven ancestors.</p>.<p><em>AFP </em>Fact Check examined three common claims about them.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/battery-swapping-key-to-future-of-e-auto-rickshaws-in-india-1107569.html" target="_blank">Battery Swapping: Key to future of e-auto rickshaws in India</a></strong></p>.<p>"Coal Powered Electric Cars.... Helping liberals pretend they are solving a make-believe crisis," reads a text shared on Facebook, with a photo of cars plugged in at a charging station.</p>.<p>The humorous meme implies that electric cars do not help lower climate-changing greenhouse gas emissions because coal is burned to feed the electricity grid.</p>.<p>The US Environmental Protection Agency has a calculator tool on its website to compare a petrol car's emissions with those of an electric one depending on where it is charged.</p>.<p>It calculates that an electric car charged in St Louis, Missouri -- part of the subregion that relies the most on coal -- on average will produce 247 grams of carbon dioxide per mile, lower than the average 381 grams of a gasoline vehicle.</p>.<p>Experts at Carbon Brief agree an electric car's emissions depend on what region or country it is charged in.</p>.<p>They would be higher in Poland or in an Asian country where more coal is burned than in France, where most electricity comes from nuclear power.</p>.<p>Overall, the International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT) found electric cars are lower-emitting than their petrol-driven equivalents across their life cycle, from mining components to recycling.</p>.<p>An electric car is also much more efficient in its use of energy than a petrol-powered one, according to the US Department of Energy and other sources.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/beyond-electric-cars-how-electrifying-trucks-buses-tractors-and-scooters-will-help-tackle-climate-change-1106036.html" target="_blank">Beyond electric cars: How electrifying trucks, buses, tractors and scooters will help tackle climate change</a></strong></p>.<p>Making the vehicles' batteries is an energy-intensive process that includes mining and trucking raw materials, assembly in factories, and shipping worldwide. Recycling them is costly.</p>.<p>Another viral text shared on Facebook claimed that 500,000 pounds (227 metric tonnes) of the earth are dug up to extract the metals for one electric car battery.</p>.<p>The estimate appeared to originate from a 2020 analysis by the Manhattan Institute, a climate-sceptic research group.</p>.<p>Several experts consulted by <em>AFP </em>said the figures were misleading. Peter Newman, professor of sustainability at Australia's Curtin University, judged it a "gross exaggeration" and said the quantity mined would vary depending on geography and the type of battery.</p>.<p>Mining has other impacts not immediately related to the global climate. About 70 per cent of cobalt -- a battery ingredient -- comes from the Democratic Republic of Congo, where use of child labour in mines has been documented.</p>.<p>Access to the ingredients also raises strategic supply concerns, with many of the raw materials held by China, according to the International Energy Agency.</p>.<p>Georg Bieker, a Berlin-based researcher at the ICCT, said the environmental damage from oil drilling made gasoline production no better.</p>.<p>The risk of devastation driven by greenhouse gas emissions, projected in recent reports by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, would be even worse.</p>.<p>"It is correct to demand improvements, e.g. as considered by voluntary standards in the industry and by mandatory due diligence requirements that are foreseen in the upcoming EU battery regulation," he said.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/e-scooters-in-flames-show-high-cost-of-indias-green-goals-1104916.html" target="_blank">E-scooters in flames show high cost of India's green goals</a></strong></p>.<p>"In any case, it's clear that the social and environmental impact of global warming is catastrophic, at a different scale than the mining of battery raw materials."</p>.<p>After a snowstorm stranded hundreds of motorists in Virginia in January, users on Facebook shared posts warning that electric vehicles would run out of power and make the traffic jam even worse.</p>.<p>"All those people would be stuck in freezing temperatures without a heated vehicle. And all the cars would be stuck unable to move because you can't bring a charging station to them," read the text.</p>.<p>"All those electric cars would become roadblocks to the gasoline-powered vehicles."</p>.<p>Several fact-checking organisations scrutinised the claim. They found there was no evidence that electric cars would fare worse in a storm.</p>.<p>Studies such as one published in 2015 by the American Chemical Society have found that electric vehicles do consume energy less efficiently when driving in the cold.</p>.<p>However various experts said that if stuck in a storm, an electric vehicle would consume less power than a gasoline one, which would have to keep its engine running to power the heating.</p>.<p>British consumer affairs magazine Which? tested an electric SUV by simulating a traffic jam, with the car's radio, air conditioning, seat-heating and headlights on, plus a tablet device plugged in playing a film.</p>.<p>That used up a negligible two per cent of the battery, or eight miles' worth of range, in an hour and a quarter - admittedly in summer conditions.</p>