Emissions Discussion (split from LC500 Thread)
The Singapore LTA calculation makes no sense because for EVs, it assumes the grid is the polluting unit whereas for ICE cars, the car itself is the polluting unit. They're assuming the grid is the energy source for EVs but ICE cars magically get hydrocarbon fuel produced without emissions.
If they can factor in upstream emissions for EVs, they should also factor in crude oil extraction, transport and refining emissions, including the huge amounts of electricity used during refining. In Singapore, that electricity most likely comes from natural gas power plants.
Last edited by chromedome; May 6, 2016 at 07:50 PM.
If they can factor in upstream emissions for EVs, they should also factor in crude oil extraction, transport and refining emissions, including the huge amounts of electricity used during refining. In Singapore, that electricity most likely comes from natural gas power plants.
How can a Model S with no tail pipe spew more CO2 than an S500? If you think it can, then I don't think I can change your mindset. Keep burnin' that dino juice then.
Last edited by chromedome; May 6, 2016 at 09:25 PM.
How can a Model S with no tail pipe spew more CO2 than an S500? If you think it can, then I don't think I can change your mindset. Keep burnin' that dino juice then.
Comparing electricity generating station emissions for EVs with tailpipe emissions of ICE vehicles is NOT an apples to oranges comparison; it is fair.
Both the generating station and the ICE vehicle burn a refined fossil fuel to generate power. That power is then transmitted some distance in order to drive the vehicle. The generating station is the engine powering the EV, just as the ICE is the engine powering the normal car.
If the engine for the EV burns especially dirty fuel (e.g. oil or coal) or burns fuel in an inefficient generating station, then it is entirely possible that it will spew more CO2 (on an equivalent basis) than a modern, highly-efficient ICE-powered car.
The gasoline/diesel car may have less tailpipe emissions but the externalities of gasoline/diesel production aren't accounted for, whereas they are for EVs. That's my beef with the whole thing. Maybe they should call it last-tailpipe analysis

Anyway, Tesla left the Singapore market in 2011 because of a spat over R&D subsidies on EVs. Apparently Musk had a chat with PM Lee over the LTA CO2 figure.
Celebrating Lexus & Toyota from Around the Globe
As the owner of that Tesla said, why aren't people in Singapore being fined for charging their iPhones using dirty electricity? And why does an i8 *with* a tailpipe have lower emissions than a Model S?
Why did I pay a $3700 gas guzzler tax on a car I drive 500 miles a year, but a Suburban or Yukon with worse gas mileage that people on average drive 11,000 miles a year is exempt? Simple answer is because there's a law about it. As I said before, if you want to cheerlead for structural change, go for it. However, you should not allow your desire for structural change affect how you perceive reality.
Last edited by gengar; May 8, 2016 at 10:32 PM.
It should be noted (as I have had to repeat multiple times in this thread, for reasons I cannot understand) that grid EF does not factor in upstream or downstream factors in its calculation. Grid EF does not care what the resources used for electricity are or where they came from, how much energy was used / emissions were created in mining/collecting, refining, transporting those resources, etc. etc.; and grid EF also does not care about how much energy might be wasted in transmission, conversion, etc. after it is generated.
As I pointed out earlier, what's ironic is that grid EF was originally standardized by the UN to calculate carbon emissions credits (i.e., for environmental money-grubbing purposes), because the carbon credit industry needed to know how much incremental/marginal emissions that alternative power sources were actually saving versus the existing grid. What's particularly ironic is that the industry most notorious for overstating grid EF is actually the green and alternative energy industry, since the higher the assumed grid EF, the more carbon credits they receive (as mentioned earlier, a bunch of companies in China got in big trouble for this recently).
As per the original news story, the Singapore Land Transport Authority (LTA) assesses taxes on imported vehicles based on their emissions. For EVs, they calculate that based on the car's power usage and Sinagpore's grid EF. Because Singapore has no nuclear power and minimal alternative power and mostly relies on oil/gas/coal for electricity generation, their grid EF is particularly high (~.5) and therefore the Singapore LTA considers the Tesla to have similar gCO2/km as an S500, so the import tax is very high.
/cliff's notes
Last edited by gengar; May 8, 2016 at 12:42 PM.

Apparently the LTA are going through their figures again but the owner of the car paid the fine anyway so he could drive the car after months of waiting. He also had to put in writing that he would only charge the car at home.
Across the small pond in much more dysfunctional Malaysia, the government there is waiving all import and road taxes on 100 Model S cars to be brought in by an official R&D agency. Those cars will be leased to government-linked companies to test EV usage and shape future policy. Tesla gave their approval to the deal, saying they'd prefer not selling to individual customers until the proper regulatory framework and charging infrastructure was available.
Singapore is an autocratic state that makes much of its "open for business" credentials. Malaysia is an autocratic and openly kleptocratic state that also touts its business-friendly policies. Only one of them thinks a Model S spews more CO2 than a big Benz...


