this post was submitted on 07 Mar 2026
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Electric Vehicles
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It's an element everywhere, but here in the UK just 28% of electricity was generated from fossil fuels in the last year. Next door, in France it's 3%. That's just two places I happen to be familiar with.
Fossil fuels are not powering my car. It's nuclear, wind and solar powered.
That is a highly misleading figure. 10% of UK renewable energy is generated at Drax, which is not only the UK’s biggest single emitter of carbon, it burns wood pellets imported from British Columbia, Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana. Fossil fuels power the tree harvesters, the saw mills, the transport trucks, the trains, the pellet factories and the ships involved in getting that fuel to Yorkshire from half a planet away.
It's 7.5% over the last 12 months, and biomass is not fossil fuels. I agree shipping it in is silly, but the carbon it releases during burning is carbon captured in recent years, not millions of years ago. That matters.
...but even if you take it over the other side of the line....it 35% instead of 28%. It also doesn't change the french figure.
And the rest of the infrastructure?
The diesel trucks that transport everything at every level industry? The diesel heavy machinery that builds the buildings, roads, etc? The ships that everything thing is imported and exported by? What about everything made from petroleum products?
Fossil fuels are used at every level for so many things and the price of them going up will drive the price of everything that needs them up.
I'm definitely of the mindset that we should limit fossil fuel use at every level as much as is humanly possible. But that mindset won't actually help anything in the right now.