2023
May
12
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 12, 2023
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

What should we make of a recent report from carmaker Tesla reminding us that, even though its cars have no tailpipes, there are significant carbon emissions associated with getting them built and on the road?

It’s worth thinking about, though there’s a lot more at play when it comes to electric vehicles and CO2 emissions.

The vast network needed to supply raw materials and component parts for EVs makes for difficult accounting. But this time, in Tesla’s report, it was part of the tally. And such “Scope 3” emissions – including those of suppliers – represented the deepest part of the product line’s carbon footprint.

Batteries are a big factor. For 2022, the firms involved in the mining and manufacturing for those accounted for 27% of Tesla’s total emissions, reports Quartz.

But the supply side isn’t the only thing to consider as we think about EVs and making the future work. The demand side – that is, consumer preferences – plays an important role, too.

There are full-size EV pickups that can power homes, and some drivers do need big vehicles. Those are pricier than EVs like the little Bolt hatchback, which General Motors discontinued in favor of pickups. 

They’re more resource-intensive, too. An editorial in the Los Angeles Times decries a wave of bigger – and bigger-battery – EVs. (The EV “high end” keeps getting higher.)

The EV story, analysts point out, remains one of net carbon impact. If you size up CO2 emissions over a vehicle’s lifetime, electricity soundly beats internal combustion – especially as more power is renewably sourced and battery technology gets “cleaner.”

High gasoline prices turn heads toward EVs, which can lead to a hunt for affordable EV models. Those are pocketbook motivations. There are planetary motivations, too. Will consumers be mindful about the relative impact of different EV vehicle options?


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Murad Sezer/Reuters
Young supporters of Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, presidential candidate for Turkey's main opposition alliance, gather during a rally ahead of the May 14 presidential and parliamentary elections.
Fayaz Aziz/Reuters
Supporters of former Prime Minister Imran Khan pray for the politician after the Supreme Court ruled that his arrest on Tuesday was illegal, in Peshawar, Pakistan, May 11, 2023.

Pandemic emergency is over. Societal shifts linger.

SOURCE:

Barrero, Jose Maria, Nicholas Bloom, and Steven J. Davis, 2021, "Why working from home will stick"; Gallup; U.S. Department of Education; National Survey of Children's Health; The Child and Adolescent Health Measurement Initiative

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Podcast

One small nation’s big lesson for democracies

In Uruguay, Democracy Done Better?

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Essay

Courtesy of Melanie Stetson Freeman
The author’s great-grandmother, mother (with baby Melanie), and grandmother (left to right) at home in suburban Washington in 1957. Shirley Stetson was a CIA analyst who, when she retired, was the agency’s highest-ranked woman.

The Monitor's View

REUTERS
Yunus Efe, a Bogazici University student, chats with a friend at a coffee house in Istanbul, Turkey, May 4.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

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Jorge Silva/Reuters
Supporters show off their rosy finery while attending an election rally for Paetongtarn Shinawatra in Bangkok, Thailand, May 12, 2023. Ms. Shinawatra is the youngest daughter of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was deposed by a military coup in 2006, and the Pheu Thai party's leading prime ministerial candidate. On May 14, Thai citizens will vote for members of the 500-seat lower house of parliament in a contest that could shape whether momentum tips toward strengthening democracy or greater authoritarian rule.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for ending your week with us. Come back Monday. We wondered, what’s a day in the life of a library like amid a rash of book bans? So we sent writer Jackie Valley Jefferson City, Missouri, to find out. 

More issues

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