• taladar@sh.itjust.works
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    9 months ago

    It becomes increasingly clear that internal combustion engines are simply not capable of having the kind of low emissions that a continued use of them would require, no matter what corporate propaganda would like to spread about them.

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I think there are still some relatively niche use-cases for them left. Specifically, if you’re using sufficiently few of them and/or using them in sufficiently rural areas, then all of the polluting outputs other than greenhouse gases become less of an issue, and if you’re running them on 100% biofuels, then they can be carbon-neutral. (Also, since vegetable oil doesn’t contain sulfur to begin with, an engine running on biodiesel emits zero SOx, which is nice.)

      In other words, replacing the cars and trucks that can reasonably be replaced with bicycles, trains, and electric automobiles (ranked from best idea to worst, by the way) is good enough; we don’t have to be perfectionist about it.

      • mondoman712
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        9 months ago

        And at that point it probably doesn’t make economical sense to keep producing them.