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Building a Toyota Prius causes more environmental damage than a Hummer that is on the road for three times longer than a Prius. As already noted, the Prius is partly driven by a battery which contains nickel. The nickel is mined and smelted at a plant in Sudbury, Ontario. This plant has caused so much environmental damage to the surrounding environment that NASA has used the ‘dead zone’ around the plant to test moon rovers. The area around the plant is devoid of any life for miles.
All of this would be bad enough in and of itself; however, the journey to make a hybrid doesn’t end there. The nickel produced by this disastrous plant is shipped via massive container ship to the largest nickel refinery in Europe. From there, the nickel hops over to China to produce ‘nickel foam.’ From there, it goes to Japan. Finally, the completed batteries are shipped to the United States, finalizing the around-the-world trip required to produce a single Prius battery. Are these not sounding less and less like environmentally sound cars and more like a farce?
Through a study by CNW Marketing called “Dust to Dust,” the total combined energy is taken from all the electrical, fuel, transportation, materials (metal, plastic, etc) and hundreds of other factors over the expected lifetime of a vehicle. The Prius costs an average of $3.25 per mile driven over a lifetime of 100,000 miles - the expected lifespan of the Hybrid.
The Hummer, on the other hand, costs a more fiscal $1.95 per mile to put on the road over an expected lifetime of 300,000 miles. That means the Hummer will last three times longer than a Prius and use less combined energy doing it.
Originally posted by MAD Hatt3r
Uh, yeah but those factories also make the parts for the car battery in a Hummer. So that means Hummers still create more pollution than a hybrid car, because they would have parts that create pollution when they're made.
Originally posted by MAD Hatt3r
I don't think the author is lying, I think he/she is taking it all out of centext
en.wikipedia.org...
The ore deposits in Sudbury are part of a large geological structure known as the Sudbury Basin, believed to be the remnants of a 1.85-billion year old meteorite impact crater. Sudbury ore contains profitable amounts of many elements, especially transition metals, including platinum. It also contains an unusually high concentration of sulfur. When nickel-copper ore is smelted, this sulfur is released into the environment, where it is toxic to vegetation. Carried aloft, it combines with atmospheric water to form sulfuric acid. This contaminates atmospheric water, resulting in a phenomenon known as acid rain...
...During the Apollo manned lunar exploration program, NASA astronauts trained in Sudbury, to become familiar with shatter cones, a rare rock formation connected with meteorite impacts. However, the popular misconception that they were visiting Sudbury because it purportedly resembled the lifeless surface of the moon dogged the city for years.
Originally posted by Freedom_for_sum
Do you think author is lying?
Originally posted by Freedom_for_sumOn a different note: all the hoopla over "bio fuels" (fuels derived from crops such as corn) is misguided as the amount of energy it takes to create the fuel and polution caused by its processing exceeds that which is created by using current petroleum technologies. The only advantage, which in my view is huge, is that it reduces our dependency on foriegn sources of oil.
My point for this thread is that if new energy technologies are going to be developed it will be up to us (the general public) to be smart and educate ourselves whether the technology does, in fact, reduce over-all pollution.
My point for this thread is that if new energy technologies are going to be developed it will be up to us (the general public) to be smart and educate ourselves whether the technology does, in fact, reduce over-all pollution.
all the hoopla over "bio fuels" (fuels derived from crops such as corn) is misguided as the amount of energy it takes to create the fuel and polution caused by its processing exceeds that which is created by using current petroleum technologies
Originally posted by darkbluesky
Originally posted by Freedom_for_sumOn a different note: all the hoopla over "bio fuels" (fuels derived from crops such as corn) is misguided as the amount of energy it takes to create the fuel and polution caused by its processing exceeds that which is created by using current petroleum technologies. The only advantage, which in my view is huge, is that it reduces our dependency on foriegn sources of oil.
I'm with you on this. Check out this thread regarding ethanol if you haven't already.
www.abovetopsecret.com...'
My point for this thread is that if new energy technologies are going to be developed it will be up to us (the general public) to be smart and educate ourselves whether the technology does, in fact, reduce over-all pollution.
Precisely.
fixed link
[edit on 3/29/2007 by darkbluesky]
Originally posted by Allred5923
Shut up with your "Techno" know how start reading efficient and respectable tabloid's!!!!
m1.2mdn.net...
[edit on 30-3-2007 by Allred5923]