Electric vehicles like the Nissan Leaf have lower greenhouse gas emissions than your typical gas-powered car, but how much lower depends on where you鈥檙e plugging in, a new report shows. It all comes down to how clean a region鈥檚 electricity grid is: The greener the source of the juice that fuels the EV, the lower the car鈥檚 carbon footprint.
Coal-fired power plants, for instance, produce nearly twice the emissions of natural gas-fired facilities, while renewable sources such as wind and solar produce scant emissions.
So what does that mean? In terms of global warming emissions, charging an EV New York is equivalent to driving a gas-powered vehicle that gets more than 70 mpg; powering that same EV in Colorado produces global warming emissions equivalent to a gasoline vehicle achieving about 33 mpg. Yesterday the science-based advocacy group the Union of Concerned Scientists released the , titled 鈥淪tate of Charge: Electric Vehicles鈥 Global Warming Emissions and Fuel-Cost Savings Across the United States.鈥
A few key findings:
- Nationwide, EVs charged from the electricity grid produce lower global warming emissions than the average compact gasoline-powered vehicle (with a fuel economy of 27 miles per gallon)鈥攅ven when the electricity is produced primarily from coal in regions with the 鈥渄irtiest鈥 electricity grids.
- In regions with the 鈥渃leanest鈥 electricity grids, EVs produce lower global warming emissions than even the most fuel-efficient hybrids.
- EVs charged entirely from renewable sources like wind and solar power produce virtually no global warming emissions.
Another plus is the cost savings: Regardless of where EV owners charge their cars, they鈥檒l save from around $750-$1,200 annually, compared to driving a compact car that gets 27mpg (assuming gas costs $3.50/gallon), the report found.
With a range of EVs and plug-in hybrids now on the market, including the Nissan Leaf, Ford Focus, Chevrolet Volt and Toyota Prius鈥攁nd with gas prices across the country hovering around $4/gallon鈥攖he report offers a timely resource for consumers looking to buy a new car.
In September, 爆料公社鈥檚 , Susan Cosier, looked at this very question of whether electric cars . One handy source she recommends checking: To find out which fuel your utility uses, go to .