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Get our efficient Rosie the Riveter on a t-shirt!
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There are hybrids. There are electric cars that plug into a wall and get their
juice from whatever mix the electric company is offering. And then there are
electic cars that are charged by solar panels on the roof of one's house. They
never need gas, and the power is free after the set-up cost.
We wondered: How tough is it to do this? Are electric cars hard to find? Is
it difficult to get a rooftop solar collector set up? Here are the stories
of two guys whose vehicles run on empty.
Darrell Dickey's story | Stephen
Weitz's story | Alex Beamer's story
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| Darrell Dickey with his RAV4 EV and daughter Kyra. |
Darrell Dickey regularly commutes
to
work
24
miles,
one way, by bike. But
when it's too cold or wet for the bike, or when he and his family travel
long distances from their home in Davis, California, he drives a battery-powered
electric
vehicle
that
he
charges with
photovoltaic (PV) panels mounted on his garage roof.
"Five years ago, I spent about $45,000 and got a brand new car (the
RAv4EV)
and the solar system," he says. "We're still driving the
car every day, and the solar system will continue to make fuel for whatever
EV
we
drive in the
future. For $45,000 we bought a new car and fuel for the rest or our lives."
In 1996, Dickey
was invited to test-drive the GM "Impact", which
he then leased for two years. (The Impact later became the EV1, the first modern
electric vehicle.) "We loved that car and hated to give it back," he
says. But the Toyota Rav4EV had just become available for purchase, so he bought
the electric vehicle he is driving today.
Dickey says the inspiration to drive
electric comes from having a child. "It
would embarrass me to have to explain to my daughter why we continued to import
and burn oil when we knew the consequences," he says. "Having no
tune-ups and no trips to the gas station ever is just icing."
By installing a solar system atop his garage, Dickey took the next step
in driving a totally clean car. "Now," he says, "I can deflect
the comments that my 'electric' car is just a 'coal-burning' car. EVs are the
ultimate flex-fuel vehicle. You can make electricity out of just about anything:
sun, wind, natural gas, coal—even gasoline! Your fuel can be totally
domestic, or in my case, totally local."
Asked how long it will take for the PV system to pay for itself, Dickey replies: "If
we think of everything in terms of what it costs us in the short-term, we're
screwed. It's the same argument people use against the Prius: When will it
pay back in gas savings? But that only accounts for the money paid at the pump.
What of the billions of dollars that leave our economy for oil, or the billions
of our tax dollars that go toward tax incentives for oil companies? What of
the cost of the military and the lives lost to protect our oil?"
But the short answer for the solar pay-back, he says, was "the instant
I turned my system on." Dickey had been paying $75 a month for electricity.
He took a loan out to buy the PV system, and pays $70 a month toward that loan. "My
electricity and gasoline bills are now zero, and next year when my loan is
paid off, this investment will be paying me probably for the rest of my life.
My PV system covers the power for my home and my car. It displaces $90 worth
of electricity and over $100 worth of gasoline every month. So my estimate
of how long until the system pays for itself is no time at all!"
Dickey says the Rav4EV is the best car he's ever owned. "My wife commutes
in it 40 miles a day, five days a week. We drive it for our weekend outings
and it does errands that are too far or too bulky for the bicycle. It has never
been tuned up, and I've spent about $50 total on it for maintenance. My wife
has not been to a gasoline station in seven years and 70,000 commute miles—not
once!"
 |
| Stephen Weitz's truck touts its own benefits. |
Stephen Weitz, who holds a Ph.D. in biochemistry, says four things prompted
him to buy an electric truck and charge it with solar energy: 1) global warming
and the National Academy of Sciences (NAS); 2) Albert Einstein; 3) nitrogen "overdose";
and 4) open habitat and species destruction.
"NAS began warning of the dangers of rising carbon dioxide levels on
global temperatures due to the greenhouse effect years ago," says Weitz,
who lives in Oakland, California. "And
Einstein won the Nobel Prize for describing the 'photovoltaic effect,' inaugurating
the age of quantum physics and making photovoltaic solar panels a theoretical
possibility."
Regarding nitrogen overdose, scientists have been documenting that harmless
nitrogen (air is 80 percent nitrogen) is converted into potent fertilizer by
internal combustion engines. This fertilizer is then deposited on soils, harming
native plant ecosystems and endangered species.
"Some call it drive-by
ICE (internal combustion engine) extinction," Weitz says. "Using
'green fuels' like ethanol and biodiesel would continue the problem, and hydrogen
fuel cells are no solution because they cost too much, they're less efficient
than battery-powered vehicles, and hydrogen is made by stripping fossil fuels,
which releases carbon dioxide and exacerbates global warming."
Weitz wanted a source of energy for his electric vehicle that didn't originate
from combustion. "By putting solar panels on the roof of my house, I could
make use of an endless energy supply to charge my electric vehicle and operate
and heat the house. Your house and your vehicle are the two biggest contributors
to global warming, so making both carbon neutral strikes at the heart of the
problem."
Rooftop mounting of solar panels also eliminates the need to convert undeveloped
habitat into solar generation facilities. "We need to save open space
for ecosystems, and we have so many empty roofs across the nation," he
says. He points out as well that terrorist attacks and earthquakes are less
destructive when power generation is distributed diffusely, rather than in
concentrated spots like nuclear power plants or nuclear waste disposal sites.
For his PV system, Weitz contacted NorCal Solar (www.norcalsolar.org), which
lists state-approved contractors. He obtained multiple bids, arranged two site
visits, and got a "significant" rebate from the state for installing
the system. He has Time of Use metering, and in the summer he gets a greater
dollars-per-kilowatt credit for his solar-generated electricity than he spends
at night to charge his electric truck. "PG&E (the local utility) is
happy because their peak power needs are highest when my solar panels are putting
out the watts, and lowest at night when I'm charging. The PG&E bill for
operating my house and electric vehicle is almost zero."
There are two types of EV's, he explains: highway capable battery electric
vehicles (BEVs), and neighborhood electric vehicles (NEVs). "Buy only
what you need," he advises." If you drive mostly around town and
take long trips once a year, get an NEV and rent a car for the long trip. If
you must do lots of freeway driving, buy a BEV—just realize it will cost
more and use more energy."
Weitz searched the Web for his electric vehicle, and recommends eBay, www.evnut.com,
and www.eaaev.org. "I was lucky and found one of the rare vehicles in
the movie "Who Killed the Electric Car" that hadn't been crushed
by the auto industry—a factory-built Chevy S10 pickup. I had it shipped
from Arizona and an electrician installed a 220-volt charger in my garage."
Millions
of Americans, Weitz says, want the option to drive on cleaner, cheaper, domestic
electricity. Many have banded together in the nonprofit Plug In America (www.pluginamerica.org)
to demand that automakers give consumers a choice.
 |
| Alex Beamer found his 1997 electric Chevy truck on the Internet. |
In 1977, Alex Beamer bought Breitenbush Hot Spring, an old hot springs resort
in the mountains of rural Oregon, about an hour east of the state capital,
Salem, where he now lives and manages a natural foods store.
"
At Breitenbush I helped create a community that sought to live lightly
on the Earth and serve others as a healing retreat and conference center,"
he says. "In the early days of that adventure I worked a lot with developing
alternative energy projects. I restored a 30-kilowatt small hydroelectric
system, drilled wells into the geothermal aquifers, and used the hot water
to heat
our buildings, domestic hot water, and hot tubs." Breitenbush
Hot Springs recently celebrated its 30th anniversary as a cooperatively
owned business.
So Beamer was already predisposed to living
sustainably when he decided to
buy an electric truck and charge it with wind energy. But the thing that inspired
him to get the electric truck was a sustainability conference where he heard
a talk about peak oil.
On investigating if he could buy or convert a Toyota
Prius into a plug-in hybrid, he found the technology wasn’t yet ready
to use. He then looked into electric vehicles and found there were no assembly-line
options at the
time that worked for ordinary driving. "So I searched the Internet for
conventional gasoline cars that had been converted to electric, and that’s
when I ran across an ad for the electric truck I ended up buying.
"It’s a 1997 production vehicle made by Chevrolet, and it was
ready to go when I bought it," he says. "They made about 1,500
of them. Most were leased vehicles that were collected at the end of the leases
and crushed. A few, maybe 50 or 60, were sold privately. My truck and many
like it were used for a few years, then developed some problems and were parked
for years. A fellow in Mesa, Arizona who’s an electric vehicle advocate
bought many of them and restored them. That’s where I bought mine: www.EVBones.com."
When Beamer bought the truck, he was already purchasing “greensource” electricity
from PG&E, his local utility. “PG&E offers all its customers
several choices of environmentally friendly electricity, and we chose greensource,
which is 85 percent wind and 15 percent biomass. Using wind-generated electricity
makes a whole lot more sense than coal, and the cost is comparable to conventional
electricity. Conventional is 9.9¢ per kilowatt hour and greensource costs
10.7¢, so greensource is .8¢ more.” PG&E’s
website for clean electricity options is here.
Beamer says there’s a lot of interest in electric vehicles but very
few ‘good’ ones available today, and retrofitting a conventional
car is time-consuming and expensive. “Hopefully in the near future there
will be more choices,” he says, "once battery technology gets where
it needs to be." Beamer says Tesla
electric cars,
which are now coming off the assembly line, are"“the most exciting
thing happening now, but they’re very expensive." Here's
a wide range of electric cars and conversions .
At the beginning of February Beamer turned off his home oil fired furnace
and started using a ground
loop heat pump system to heat the family home. "So
now, since this system runs off electricity and our utility offers a clean
electricity option, we run our whole household with wind powered electricity!"
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