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Thailand targets 1 million electric vehicles on the road by 2025


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35 minutes ago, Blumpie said:

Kindly explain your plans to upgrade the electrical grid.

No plan?  Didn't think so.  

 

Like California.  Plan to be 100% electric vehicles.  Can't keep the lights on.

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13 hours ago, ParkerN said:

Oh Dear God. Another hub in someone's mind.

 

1,000,000 elecrtic vehicles in a little less than 4 years - right.

 

Not enough production capacity - hence TL *will become* a hub for production of electric vehicles - not *already is...*

 

Somebody had another wet dream then....

Thai Carmanufacturers build 2 milion Cars in one Year.....whats your Problem!?

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Why would an ordinary Thai person choose to buy an electric motorbike? Thais ride ICE motorbikes because they are cheap, not because they like motorbikes.

 

Anyone with money to spend is going to buy a car, because a car gives you status and is more useful. Electric motorbikes are expensive and have poor range. Few Thais will be interested.

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13 minutes ago, ujayujay said:

Thai Carmanufacturers build 2 milion Cars in one Year.....whats your Problem!?

My problem is that Electric Cars are not ICE cars, and it would likely be naive to assume that similar manufacturing factors would apply. Might be wrong if course.

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20 hours ago, Surelynot said:

....and it will all rest on this.

How many charging plugs per station, I can imagine somchai getting upset that someone is taking to long to charge his vehicle , and out with the weapons. 

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I believe battery powered vehicles will be a short term phenomenon given the appalling conditions under which cobalt, which is anyway a finite product, is mined, and the problem of how to dispose of used batteries. Hydrogen is surely the way to go.

 It will be interesting to see how BMW progress with their development of the hydrogen- powered X5.

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34 minutes ago, Thingamabob said:

cobalt

Actually it is your thinking that is short term and dated. Cobalt is being dropped completely from newer EV battery chemistry.

 

34 minutes ago, Thingamabob said:

Hydrogen is surely the way to go.

Quite the opposite. When you consider the entire life cycle, hydrogen is too polluting and makes no sense. BMW's power of choice will be the death of them--developing new cars powered by gas, diesel, hybrid, hydrogen, and electric all at the same time meanwhile smarter companies focus on optimizing for the electric future where all the growth is. You can make something a lot better when you have all your people working on the same thing working towards the same goal.

 

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2 hours ago, heybuz said:

How many charging plugs per station, I can imagine somchai getting upset that someone is taking to long to charge his vehicle , and out with the weapons. 

Good god...yes....could be dead bodies all over the place....

 

I don't suppose hi-sos will be driving electric, but if they do, will they need separate charging points?

Edited by Surelynot
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The best bet would be e-scooters andce-tuktuks in the cities, if they could produce some reliable ones with decent 50-80km range.

Shanghai has plenty e-scooters for example.

 

The plus side: take up way less place on the city roads than cars do, with most commonly also a single traveller.

 

Huge noise reduction from current, often modified to be loud bikes.

 

Also charging is easy, little need to build new charger infrastructure.

 

The only downside really is public attitude towards traffic laws, a big cause of road death toll.

 

 

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E-fuels that can be used in combustion engines that are being currently being developed will be more useful and have a lower carbon footprint than EVs.... problem is, that vested interests/big business have decided on EVs and investments have been made. To make EVs ubiquitous, then it's not just about infrastructure and associated practicality challenges but also about where all the electricity comes from as the scale-up will need to be huge, and that's before we even get started on the issues regarding lithium batteries and their sourcing/disposal etc. It's going to take longer than the rose-tinted glasses brigade think and the logical step would be to go e-fuels first and slowly phase out oil/coal reliance. Also, countries like Thailand will have to figure out how to meet the changeover and up-take goals but still be about to scam it somehow. 

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2 hours ago, Sir Dude said:

E-fuels that can be used in combustion engines that are being currently being developed will be more useful and have a lower carbon footprint than EVs

You wouldn't by chance have a credible source to verify that? Thought not.

 

2 hours ago, Sir Dude said:

problem is, that vested interests/big business have decided on EVs and investments have been made.

No, it would mean the smart players would rush in and crush EVs exactly what we are seeing with EV's rushing in to crush ICE. But the real answer is there is no such technology.

 

2 hours ago, Sir Dude said:

To make EVs ubiquitous, then it's not just about infrastructure and associated practicality challenges but also about where all the electricity comes from as the scale-up will need to be huge,

Of course EVs will accelerate this, but power is always being scaled up every year so nothing new there. It happens automatically as the country develops and the population grows. Do you know that building a new shopping center in Bangkok draws more power than entire provinces do in Thailand? They have demonstrated that they are perfectly capable of handling surges in increased demand. Also don't forget as time goes on more people will also be charging at home on solar.

 

2 hours ago, Sir Dude said:

that's before we even get started on the issues regarding lithium batteries and their sourcing/disposal etc.

It's already been thought of. New chemistries optimize out rare earths. The beautiful thing is they discovered it's cheaper to recycle an EV battery than to build a brand new one from raw materials. Thus, recycling is huge...just see what VW or battery recycling startups are up to.

 

2 hours ago, Sir Dude said:

countries like Thailand will have to figure out how to meet the changeover and up-take goals but still be about to scam it somehow. 

That's a collision course. Here they are fat, dumb and happy boasting there will be this million EV's out there. Yet when people look and see the prices are double other countries no one is buying them. Not two years ago, not last year, not this year, nor will they buy them next year or the years after. Rather than fix the pricing problem, more than likely they'll just dream up excuses as to why Thailand is slow to adopt.

 

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On 3/28/2021 at 10:47 AM, tjo o tjim said:

Scooters might not use much fuel, but they are not efficient.  That actually makes them prime candidates.

Scooters are brilliantly efficient. Use way less in both manufacture and operation than any car (and most cars globally carry only 1-2 people).

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17 hours ago, SmartyMarty said:

Scooters are brilliantly efficient. Use way less in both manufacture and operation than any car (and most cars globally carry only 1-2 people).

That is efficacy, not efficiency.  Weight vs fuel consumption is efficiency.

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On 3/27/2021 at 11:53 PM, Wiggy said:
On 3/27/2021 at 9:11 PM, Blue Muton said:

Well they have a motor......

Yes, you’re right. I somehow don’t see an electric motor as a motor. More of a whiny thing.  But that’s just me. Lol. 

 

If you want to be technically correct, the current design is an enginecycle.

 

Those whiny little things take a Tesla from zero to 60 faster than any car that's even close to the same price range.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fastest_production_cars_by_acceleration

 

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18 hours ago, SmartyMarty said:

Scooters are brilliantly efficient. Use way less in both manufacture and operation than any car (and most cars globally carry only 1-2 people).

 

If only they weren't 20-40 times as dangerous per km driven...

 

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12 hours ago, SmartyMarty said:
18 hours ago, impulse said:

If only they weren't 20-40 times as dangerous per km driven...

Haha it's not the scooters that are dangerous but those untrained who are riding them.

 

Nah.  It's simple physics.  4 wheels, seat belts and over a ton of steel make you safer in a car than on a scooter.  Regardless of your skill level, you're 20-40x safer in a car.

 

 

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