top of page

Do EVs really make the environment better?

Updated: Aug 24, 2022

Since the first modern electric vehicles (EV) took to the roads in the 2000s, critics have been quick to question the ‘clean’ label attached to them. From manufacturing concerns to battery power sources as well as overall autonomy, EVs have been under scrutiny from sceptics. With the amount of debate and misinformation troubling the waters, the facts behind the efficiency of electric vehicles have become somewhat clouded - so just how clean are these vehicles?



Battery Production


An argument that is routinely put forward to contrast the clean image of electric cars is the pollution behind the manufacturing process of their batteries. There is indeed a range of rare earth metals that make up the composition of the battery, and their extraction and manipulation can contribute to carbon emissions. However, as a 2018 International Council on Clean Transportation (ICTT) report illustrates, the country in which the batteries are being produced as well as the battery composition has a much higher level of impact on emission. A comparative study between EVs and internal combustion engine vehicle (ICEV) in China corroborates the ICTT report, indicating that infrastructure and efficient manufacturing techniques are the keys to reducing emissions during production. Chinese EV battery manufacturers produce up to 60% more CO2 during fabrication than ICEV engine production, but could cut their emissions by up to 66% if they adopted American or European manufacturing techniques. As such, the pollution created through the extraction process and production of batteries remains on par or slightly higher than the manufacturing process of petrol or diesel-based engines.

Lifetime Difference

In its study, the ICTT also notes the stark difference in emissions between electric and internal combustion over the course of their lifetimes. With no combustion and complete lack of tailpipe emissions, EVs produce the bulk of their emissions through their manufacturing process and the sourcing of their energy, giving them an advantage over petrol and diesel-powered cars. Whilst ICEVs have been steadily reducing their emissions since 2000, electric vehicles still have a marked edge by producing close to no running emissions. Additionally, as EVs become more common and manufacturing becomes more widespread, battery recycling will be more efficient and reduce the need to extract new materials, therefore lessening the reliance on mining and production of new batteries.


The Future Of Transport


Current electrical grids are mostly moving towards reducing their reliance on fossil

fuels and increasing their renewable energy production. With electrical vehicles

already producing fewer emissions through their lifetime regardless of the energy

source, it shows that EVs are indeed the vehicle of the future. Car manufacturers

are also accepting the fact that electric cars are less polluting and producing

more EVs will help reduce total carbon emissions.

Electric vehicles as they currently stand are far less polluting than their

combustion engine counterparts. As the technology becomes more

mainstream, it is likely to become even more efficient and

sustainable. Economies of scale will benefit EV manufacturing by providing

better infrastructure, more efficient manufacturing techniques, recycling

options and reduce the need for the mining of new materials. Electric

vehicles are not a panacea but combined with greater deployment of

renewables and the decarbonization of the electricity grid they offer a

pathway to greatly reduce greenhouse gas emissions.


99 views2 comments

Recent Posts

See All
bottom of page