Hi Guesi, Alan, further on this:
Yes I understand the Spar was just an example. There are many examples of where mankind impacts its environment, pollution-wise the Spar was just a bad one. The Spar is an excellent example of where public opinion is happily formed without knowing all the facts, and still strongly points in one particular way. Public opinion is not always the best opinion, or correct: the earth has never been flat, even though for a long time the majority of people were strongly convinced it was. In a society where democracy rules, this is a problem.
Yes, I was wondering about the "many countries were ruined by oil companies" too, but let that pass. Thank you for giving an example. I did not know about Mohammad Mosaddegh, so I looked him up:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammad_Mosaddegh . Yes indeed, oil played a role, but it were the US & UK governments that actually did the deed. Of course oil played a role here, but oil = money = resources. In my previous I euphemistically asked "Has there ever been any competition for resources?" but obviously the answer is YES. Every war or conflict is either about religion or resources (or the combination thereof). Power.
We have a lilac tree in our garden, and in winter time my wife hangs some foodstuff in it, for the birds. That's a resource for them. Is there competition? Do they fight over it? Try it for yourself & see. Remember Darwin also only just looked and reported on what he saw (in his Beagle journey).
Over the course of evolution mankind has been in competition with the other species, and to some extent with the environment, but by now we have clearly won this competition, and we dominate our environment. It's time for us to come to grips with that, and realise that some of our characteristics that helped us get to where we are now (like the ability to procreate 6-vold each generation) has become a great burden and is now hurting us. Another characteristic is the psychological drive we have to always do better, bigger and greater (leading to your 2 tons/200 hp SUV for the supermarket & the school run). That psychological drive too might need modification. At some stage we have to learn that what we have is good enough.
There are a number of things in your post I don't fully understand, and one of them is how a battery which has proven to no longer effectively store & reproduce power can still be used well when attached to a solar cell. I'd say: if the thing no longer works well, it doesn't work well, right?
The other comment I have is this. The problem with batteries (even lithium) is that they are a very heavy medium to store energy in. And that weight you have to accelerate & decelerate almost continuously in a car (or a motorbike). With F = m*a weight
always works against you. You want your medium to store your energy in as light as possible. True, the electro motor is normally lighter than an equivalent internal combustion engine, but still, in terms of weight the conventional internal combustion engine + fuel wins hands down. See in racing.
Now you are correct in saying that our fossil fuel reserves are limited and dwindling, but let us not forget that those too were made by solar energy, several millions/billions of years back. A main problem of course is that those reserves stem from a more carbon-rich environment, and if we now burn them we'll be putting that carbon, that was stored in the sub-surface, back into our environment. Not a good idea. We want central heating, not global heating.
But we shouldn't be relying on those fossil reserves for fuel. We can use the solar energy from the sun to capture carbon from our current environment and produce clean fuels. Like oils from rapeseed, or ethanol from sugar beets or cane. True, when you burn that (in an internal combustion engine), some carbon is produced, but on the whole the process is completely carbon neutral, as that same carbon was only a short while ago extracted from the environment. It's a cycle.
Slick idea, this solar integration. Yes, it may help, but probably not enough for normal use, in our area (haven't seen the sun for weeks). Unless we drive vehicles like they do in
https://worldsolarchallenge.org/ .
Don't get me wrong, I'm all for good ideas, I don't drive a big SUV, and I actually think my ecological footprint is decently small.