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Truckers rail against new EPA rules mandating transition to ‘useless’ EV big rigs
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<blockquote data-quote="QvQ" data-source="post: 77655514" data-attributes="member: 421823"><p>Do your own research, Google the issue as I could pick and choose articles to influence your understanding. I am merely giving "research" topics for anyone to search themselves. There are numerous websites about the Federal And California regulations, enacted and proposed.</p><p>I am merely stating my understanding of the issues.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Meanwhile:</p><p>"About half a dozen manufacturers offer battery-electric big rigs, but none offer more than about 200 miles of range. Charging can take hours, an impractical proposition for a driver who must cover 500 miles in a day."</p><p></p><p>If the freight is slowed both by the miles the truck can travel (200 rather than 500), reduced weight of freight per truck due to heavy batteries and hours spent recharging that will slow freight considerably and add to the cost of the delivered products.</p><p></p><p>There are 5 million big rigs in America. That is what our lives depend on.</p><p>Having bureaucrats whose sole understanding is what NPR tells them about "Climate Change" tampering with that very fragile system of diesel trucks is more terrifying than any claims about climate change.</p><p></p><p>It is not a question of finding another source of energy. Oil is a finite, non-renewable resource. Every trucker in America is aware that the studies done in the 1990s predicted the world would start running out of oil, abt 2050 +/-.</p><p>However, trusting the food supply of this nation to the current state of electric vehicle technology and government mandated accomplishment of the change, all in 10 years, could lead to major disruptions and soaring costs.</p><p></p><p>At the bottom of the California EPA website outlining the new laws, the big rigs, the interstate 80,000 lb rigs are also included in these mandates</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="QvQ, post: 77655514, member: 421823"] Do your own research, Google the issue as I could pick and choose articles to influence your understanding. I am merely giving "research" topics for anyone to search themselves. There are numerous websites about the Federal And California regulations, enacted and proposed. I am merely stating my understanding of the issues. Meanwhile: "About half a dozen manufacturers offer battery-electric big rigs, but none offer more than about 200 miles of range. Charging can take hours, an impractical proposition for a driver who must cover 500 miles in a day." If the freight is slowed both by the miles the truck can travel (200 rather than 500), reduced weight of freight per truck due to heavy batteries and hours spent recharging that will slow freight considerably and add to the cost of the delivered products. There are 5 million big rigs in America. That is what our lives depend on. Having bureaucrats whose sole understanding is what NPR tells them about "Climate Change" tampering with that very fragile system of diesel trucks is more terrifying than any claims about climate change. It is not a question of finding another source of energy. Oil is a finite, non-renewable resource. Every trucker in America is aware that the studies done in the 1990s predicted the world would start running out of oil, abt 2050 +/-. However, trusting the food supply of this nation to the current state of electric vehicle technology and government mandated accomplishment of the change, all in 10 years, could lead to major disruptions and soaring costs. At the bottom of the California EPA website outlining the new laws, the big rigs, the interstate 80,000 lb rigs are also included in these mandates [/QUOTE]
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Truckers rail against new EPA rules mandating transition to ‘useless’ EV big rigs
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