The Dangerous Lithium Car Battery and Why You Should Care

California fire crews use SIX THOUSAND gallons of water to extinguish burning Tesla Model S whose battery spontaneously combusted while driving down busy freeway.

  • Fire officials said that nothing was wrong with the car before it combusted 

Mustang picks up the facts of Lithium and why it is so dangerous.

As with all alkali metals, lithium is highly reactive and flammable.  It must be stored in a vacuum atmosphere or inert liquid (such as purified kerosene or mineral oil).

When cut, lithium exhibits a metallic luster.  When exposed to moist air, it corrodes quickly to a dull silvery gray color and then to a black tarnish.  Lithium never occurs freely in nature but only in ionic compounds, which were once the primary source of lithium.  Due to its solubility as an ion, it is present in ocean water and is commonly obtained from brines.  Lithium metal is isolated electrolytically from a mixture of lithium and potassium chloride.

The nucleus of the lithium atom verges on instability — because the two stable lithium isotopes found in nature have among the lowest binding energies per nucleon of all stable nuclides.  Thus, lithium is less common in the solar system because of its relative nuclear instability than 25 of the first 32 chemical elements (even though its nuclei are very light).  For these and other reasons, lithium has critical applications in nuclear physics.  In 1932, the transmutation of lithium atoms to helium was the first fully man-made nuclear reaction.  Lithium deuteride serves as a fusion fuel in staged thermonuclear weapons.

Lithium (and its compounds) has several industrial applications, including heat-resistant glass and ceramics, lithium grease lubricants, flux additives for iron, steel, and aluminum production, lithium metal batteries, and lithium-ion batteries.  These uses consume more than three-quarters of lithium production, and lithium is present in biological systems in trace amounts.  Lithium salts have proven helpful as a mood stabilizer and an antidepressant in treating mental illnesses, such as bipolar disorder and political leftism.

The foregoing helps us understand why major airlines do not want people taking lithium batteries aboard.  The flight may not end well.  And now we have an additional concern (as expressed by The Guardian’s Climate Justice Reporter, Nina Lakhani.  She recently reported that America’s transition to electric vehicles could require more than three times the current amount of lithium produced globally.  If this happens, Nina warns, the mining operation will cause “needless water shortages, indigenous land grabs, and ecosystem destruction inside and outside its borders.”

The problem is, according to Ms. Lakhani, that unless the American people reduce their dependence on automobiles, the transition to lithium battery-powered electric vehicles, according to the United Nations mandate (by the year 2050), will likely deepen global environmental and social inequalities linked to mining — and MAY even jeopardize the 1.5 Celsius global heating target.

Aside: I was unaware that the United Nations had imposed a mandate to shift from gas-powered to electric-powered automobiles.  I feel very uninformed. 

But all is not lost.  Ms. Lakhani assures everyone (in England) that ambitious policies forcing Americans to engage in mass transportation, develop walkable towns and cities, and develop robust battery recycling would slash the amount of extra lithium required by more than 90%.  This is exciting news, shared with Ms. Lakhani by the Climate and Community Project, University of California (Davis) — and the timing couldn’t be better because, thanks to the Presidency of Joe Biden, additional money has been made available for Inflation Reduction and Infrastructure Investment and Jobs.

Here’s the problem in a nutshell: the global demand for lithium so that everyone can have one or more electric-powered vehicles in their driveway (and the army, navy, air force, and coast guard can operate electric-powered military vehicles) is predicted to rise more than 40 times by 2040.  Of course, the hairball in our stomachs comes from the increase in lawsuits levied against lithium mining in the U.S., Chile, Serbia, and Tibet.  It won’t be long before the global community will no longer countenance America’s big cars, sprawling cities, and widely distributed bedroom communities.  The geopolitical authorities simply won’t stand for it.

Stay tuned for updated information about the likely effects of driving vehicles at high rates of speed while relying on unstable and highly explosive lithium hybrid engines.  Meanwhile, let us endeavor to contact our representatives in Congress and urge them to increase lithium production for mood-shaping medications and distribution among our left-inclined denizens.

As far as Lithium in the U.S.? Better to have it mined in in Africa by the kids.

A lithium mine in California?

 
 
The Salton Sea region has one of the world’s largest known reserves of lithium, enough to power batteries for more than 50 million electric vehicles within a few years. But first it must be extracted from hot geothermal brine loaded with toxic material, a process that’s never been done before at scale.Aug 31, 2022
 

The Fish and Wildlife Service said in listing the flower that the potential mining poses the biggest threat to the survival of the 6-inch-tall plant with yellow blooms at the only place it’s known to exist. It’s also threatened by road-building, livestock grazing, rodents that eat it, invasive plants and climate change, the service said.

The horrible truth about mining for E.V.’s

 

The worst of the swamp.

The Roll Out of the New Electric Chevy Volt – an Inconvenient Reality

Talk about an inconvenient truth! We will start out with the excitement of the roll out of the new Chevy Volt. Ah, I don’t want to give the surprise ending away….just wait for it.

I will tell the tale of how we are being played. Rolling through some clips and I’ll give the unvarnished truth of what the real cost is to far off countries. Especially the people who work the mines.

We must add a field trip in a EV.

And a post would not be complete without adding the ultimate insult. Our President and his family making out like bandits. Hold on….here we go:

Democrat Senator Debbie Stabenow bragged that she passed “every” gas station in her new electric vehicle and it “didn’t matter how high [gas] was,” during a Senate Finance Committee hearing on the budget on 6/7/2022.

Does anyone really believe she drove the car this distance herself?

Apparently, in this woman’s mind, electricity magically appears out of the ether. A modern day Marie Antoinette. A true champion of the little people.

Another experience:

The following is a first-person account of a WSJ writer’s nightmarish road trip with an electric vehicle:

I thought it would be fun.

That’s what I told my friend Mack when I asked her to drive with me from New Orleans to Chicago and back in an electric car.

Over four days, we spent $175 on charging. We estimated the equivalent cost for gas in a Kia Forte would have been $275, based on the AAA average national gas price for May 19. That $100 savings cost us many hours in waiting time.

But that’s not the whole story. Read the full story to get entire experience in case you are thinking of getting one. I pulled out a few paragraphs:

The woman charging next to us describes a harrowing recent trip in her Volkswagen ID.4. Deborah Carrico, 65, had to be towed twice while driving between her Louisville, Ky., apartment and Boulder, Colo., where her daughter was getting married.

“My daughter was like, ‘You’ve lost it mom; just fly,’ ” the retired hairdresser says. She says she felt safer in a car during the pandemic—but also vulnerable when waiting at remote charging stations alone late at night.

“But if someone is going to get me, they’re going to have to really fight me,” she says, wielding her key between her fingers like a weapon.

While she loves embracing the future, she says, her family has been giving her so much pushback that she is considering trading the car in and going back to gas.

Smiling At Gas Prices

‘Charge, Urgently!’

Back on the road, we can’t even make it 200 miles on a full charge en route to Miner, Mo. Clearly, tornado warnings and electric cars don’t mix. The car’s highway range actually seems worse than its range in cities.

Indeed, highway driving doesn’t benefit as much from the car’s regenerative-braking technology—which uses energy generated in slowing down to help a car recharge its battery—Kia spokesman James Bell tells me later.

He suspects our car is the less-expensive EV6 model with a range not of 310 miles, as listed on Turo, but 250. He says he can’t be sure what model we were driving without physically inspecting the car.

“As we have all learned over many years of experience with internal combustion engine vehicles, factors such as average highway speed, altitude changes, and total cargo weight can all impact range, whether derived from a tank of gasoline or a fully charged battery,” he says.

To save power, we turn off the car’s cooling system and the radio, unplug our phones and lower the windshield wipers to the lowest possible setting while still being able to see. Three miles away from the station, we have one mile of the estimated range.

“Charge, Urgently!” the dashboard urges. “We know!” we respond.

Read the full story at Climate Change Dispatch

Let’s look at the basics of this whole thing….

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Making China richer.

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Credits the lady says? Credits? And you wonder about the price of gas?

Prices for the credits jumped to a record high of almost $2 in June from only 10 cents at the start of 2020, the resolution said. They are now the second-largest expense for refiners like PBF, after crude oil. The document noted that 800 million fewer credits were issued last year than were needed to meet the 2020 standard.

The burden of the credits is worsened, the independent refiners say, by the fact that they buy them from larger competitors who have the technical ability to blend biofuels, and so earn the credits that they can then sell to the smaller companies. That amounts to the smaller companies effectively subsidizing their competitors, they say.

From a previous post: Biden Mandates Increased Ethanol in Gas – Raises Corn Prices by 30 Percent

Finally the post would not be complete without a few words of wisdom from our Press Secretary.

Karine Jean-Pierre says economy is ‘better than it has been historically’

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