Hi Alan!
A recent thread related to this is
viewtopic.php?f=5&t=12235 from Andy_c, an older one your own
viewtopic.php?f=19&t=11627 or my
viewtopic.php?f=19&t=11210 , there are probably more.
Some more thoughts:
1) CO2-wise, our MZ's aren't so bad. A good indication for CO2 is how much fuel it uses per distance travelled, and while two strokes are rather inefficient, due to their low power the normal 250cc ETZ isn't so bad. Typically 5L/100 km I believe, but I don't really know. Blurredman will know better.
Where our two strokes score poorly is in particulate pollution: microscopic particles of solid or liquid matter suspended in the air. Those come particularly from the oil we add to the fuel, and are thus inherent in the two-stroke lubrication & combustion cycle. Where CO2 is a global issue, particulate pollution is more relevant in densely populated urban areas. So we will be/ are banned there. Of course, in the wider scheme of things, our MZs form quite a negligible contribution, compared to wood burning fire places, steel production, ...
2)I do not know with certainty how much pollution is associated with the production of batteries, and the resources which are required for it. But I too understand it is significant, both of those. No, I do not understand the push to go electric either. I have yet to see an honest comparison, including
all lifecycle costs/resources/pollution/other environmental effects. For now I do not think it is a solution. Only maybe for the local particulate pollution issue, which is not an important issue where we live, not at all. Particulate pollution you can see, from the chimneys & exhausts, and I suspect it is a political position to replace that (by pollution you can not see, and which happens in China, and which boosts commerce).
3) Just the plans they have here, in Belgium, to close all nuclear energy plants. A few decades back, it became common knowledge that nuclear
fission plants produce waste that remains radioactive for thousands of years, and poses severe risks (Chernobyl, Fukushima, ...). Yes, those are issues & risks. Yet I feel we should be able to manage those, and the alternatives of using fossil fuels give you the certainty of producing CO2, which give you the certainty of climate change. (I know you can inject CO2 in old gas fields, but that makes it extremely costly hence unattractive.) And other alternatives like wind & solar come with issues too, and are insufficient to meet our energy demands. Nevertheless: that is the plan. In Germany too, I believe. While in France & the UK there will be more nuclear plants...
Particularly noteworthy are the nuclear
fusion developments in the UK. Very commendable, and one of the few solutions that can postpone mankind's problems a bit. Till the next bottleneck comes.