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Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumSkip the Car Charger: Roads With a Jolt of Electricity Are Coming to the U.K.
http://www.takepart.com/article/2015/08/17/roads-with-jolt-electricity-coming-uk?cmpid=tpdaily-eml-2015-08-17Sure, ditching a gas guzzler in favor of an ultra-low-emission, electricity-powered vehicle is better for the environment. But what happens if youre on a road trip, your electric cars battery runs out of juice, andhorrortheres no outlet around to plug in for a recharge?
Eliminating the possibility of that nightmare scenario is at the heart of an effort announced late last week by government officials across the pond. Highways England, the agency responsible for operating and maintaining major roads, said it plans to conduct an 18-month trial of highways that will wirelessly charge vehicles as they travel along them.
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The effort comes on the heels of a successful feasibility study that looked at whether what Highways England calls a dynamic wireless power transfer system would be able to charge cars. The project is part of a five-year, $780-million effort by the government to spur the development of electric vehicle use in the U.K.
Given the ongoing problems with air pollution there, its an effort thats needed. Thanks to carbon emissions from vehicles, Londons Oxford Street has a reputation as the roadway with the worst air pollution in the world. The problem extends outside the capital. The particulate matter spewing out of vehicles nationwide causes an estimated 60,000 deaths per year across Britain, according to the U.K.s Committee on the Medical Effects of Air Pollutants. Globally, an estimated 7 million people die annually from breathing in dirty air, according to the World Health Organization.
Where the tests will be heldand which companies will be working on the projecthasnt yet been shared. What has been committed to is that by 2016 or 2017 we will hold off-road trialsin other words, not on a public road," Stuart Thompson, a spokesperson for Highways England, told BBC News.
However, the technology behind the initiative seems fairly commonsense: The electric vehicles used in the trials will be equipped with wireless sensors that will pick up a charge from the specially designed roadways. That doesnt mean its that simple. The researchers have to figure out how to create roads that can withstand temperature extremes and wear and tearwhat happens if a massive pothole develops or if the road is covered in ice or snow?while also effectively charging vehicles.
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Skip the Car Charger: Roads With a Jolt of Electricity Are Coming to the U.K. (Original Post)
eridani
Aug 2015
OP
This seems like a questionable idea for what is likely a very expensive, inefficient method. n/t
PoliticAverse
Aug 2015
#1
PoliticAverse
(26,366 posts)1. This seems like a questionable idea for what is likely a very expensive, inefficient method. n/t
bananas
(27,509 posts)2. It's actually very efficient, and likely to be cost-effective. nt
Binkie The Clown
(7,911 posts)3. They can honestly claim that it is for convenience, but
how can they claim energy savings given the horrendous losses in wireless induction transmission of power. Not to mention that fact that you will be driving through a powerful alternating magnetic field that might very well wreck havoc on your body. Who knows? Has anybody camped out on top of a power transformer 24/7 to see what happens to the cells in their body?
I see another gee-whiz boondoggle in the making. Anything to distract us from what really needs to be done to save civilization from itself.
> I see another gee-whiz boondoggle in the making.
> Anything to distract us from what really needs to be done to save civilization from itself.
Sad but true.
eppur_se_muova
(36,261 posts)4. Ummmm... and how is energy to be metered and billed ?
If you're not giving it away for free, you need to figure that out.