How Much Does It Cost to Charge an Electric Vehicle? (A comparison at home and on the road, with gasoline)::Few people know what a kilowatt-hour costs them, so they don’t realize how cheap EV home charging is versus gasoline. On the road, it’s more complicated.

  • DarkShaggy@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Not true. Near 50% for CA. One of the largest stars in the USA.

    2022, renewable resources, including hydroelectric power and small-scale, customer-sited solar power, accounted for 49% of California’s in-state electricity generation. Natural gas fueled another 42%. Nuclear power supplied almost all the rest.

    https://www.eia.gov/state/?sid=CA#:~:text=In 2022%2C renewable resources%2C including,California’s in-state electricity generation.

    • zoe @infosec.pub
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      1 year ago

      The world doesn’t revolve only around CA. what about the rest of the world, where EVs are used ?

      • Shaolin Shrimp@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Well here’s the data for my country:

        According to official data, Scotland broke previous records by generating 35.3TWh of renewable electricity in 2022, marking a 28.1% increase from 2021 and 9.8% from 2020.

        This amount of electricity could power all households in Scotland for over three years.

          • Marruk@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Do you understand how much effort you’re putting into being “right” rather than having an actual discussion?

            For context, you started with “EV is bad because it uses coal”, implying that it is worse than ICE vehicles (somehow).

            Then you had to change it to “EV is bad because it uses non-renewable energy.”

            Then you had to change it to “EV is bad because it uses non-renewable energy and renewable energy, but not really much renewable energy.”

            Then you had to change it to “EV is bad because outside of California, which doesn’t count (for some reason), it uses non-renewable energy and renewable energy, but not really much renewable energy.”

            Now that someone is pointing out that other places besides California use significant amounts of renewable energy, your argument has become “I only will accept arguments that provide citations, even though my own various, shifting arguments, have provided none.”

            This is in no way a good look for you.