Jim somehow i think you've missed a few science classes.
Petrol and Diesel cars still require Electricity for the process...
For a Petrol/Gas what happens is the petrol is squirted (like an aerosol can) into the pistons where it is compressed with air and a spark ignites this in time with the piston.
Diesel work similar only they use a constant heat source so once compression has hit it's peak there is a more violent reaction.
However BOTH engines still must be cranked to start the process manually, hense electric starter motors
The standard car once it has started uses an onboard generator often attached to the drive shaft that connects to what is effectively a dynamo generator which supplies power to the car whilst it is on and recharges the battery.
Car batteries like most batteries are no actually charged from a power station or something, it is a pure chemical reaction of materials... although the mannor in which a car battery has power cells within it so that once the original Sulfuric Acid power runs dry you can use the Dilute water with Nitrate packs to recharge using Direct Current.
Now there are also generators known as ElectroMagnetic Generators; these work much in the same way as a Dynamo, only difference being that you use a Standard electrical input to power 2 electro magnets which are positioned either side of another magnet (of the same type) which is in turn attached to a small shaft.
You must manually push the magnet to start but once spinning it will perpetually turn due to the magnetic fields, it produces enough electricity to take over the battery in powering the magnets which keep it turning.
The whole process can be again done with a battery which as i've mention uses natural chemical reactions to produce the electricity.
This car happens to use such power supplies... it is 100% clean. Hell it belches out Oxygen which means its actually BETTER for the environment than a bicycle. Especially as there is no refining process required for water, so no industrial machines chugging away at it.
Think about it, the only time this actually has technology being used which *could* harm the environment is when being built in the plant, but Honda are based in the south of Japan; in a city which is entirely powered by a Solar Power Station.
So only the materials themselves are actually harming the environment to make. However considering your cutting around 50% of the pollution from production and 100% from return use; think about it for a section.
Chemical energy come in more forms than just Fossil or Petroleum based. Ever had someone show you howto use a Potatoe or Citric Fruit to create enough electricity to power a small lightbulb?
At the end of the day the main pollutant from cars is thier everyday use.
1 Car being used every day for an hr trip to work and back for a year = the output of a powerplant for a day.
This might not seem like much but there are over 1Billion Vehicles on the road every day. Not all are fuel economical either.
This is ontop of the current pollution.
So even IF and that's a big IF the battery to start the process within the car is powered at a station; it wouldn't be any different from any other car on the market as it stands, and that 1hr or so it takes to fully charge the cells is a pittance in price compared to years of pollution from petrol/diesel.
And actually Coal isn't actually anywhere near as bad as Petrol as that fossil fuel only releases around .01% the Carbon Dioxide that Petrol does, and that is the ONLY thing it releases; where as Petrol releases around 20 different toxins and gases all of which are deadly.
A moderate ammount of Carbon Dioxide is necessary for the ozone, and the plants feed on it.
They don't however feed on Carbon Monoxide or such gasses.
Quote: "So this would be a great envromental car IF we used a renewable fuel source to power our homes."
just exactly what the hell does that have to do with a car?
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