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The problem is getting the electricity to the car. Batteries are actually relatively poor in terms of energy density, and are usually too heavy to be very useful in cars. Gasoline and diesel hold much more energy for their weight, as do hydrogen and flywheels (yes, believe it or not, flywheels are a more effective way to power a vehicle than gasoline).
This means that any way of powering cars on electricity will have to be through some other means than batteries. Solar panels are one idea, but unfortunately they don't work when it's cloudy. Wires, such as those used by streetcars and trolley buses, are also fairly effective but again they will only work, well, where they're installed. As technology improves, microwave beams or lasers may become viable, but so far we can't manage that over very long distances. So for the moment, electricity just plain isn't very effective at all.
Roflocaust. Electricity is absolutely the EASIEST form of energy to distribute. Have you heard of grids? They cover all populated areas of the united states. Can you say as much for gas stations that sell ethanol, let alone plants to distribute distilled hydrogen in fuel cells.
As for the distillation of ethanol, is it as difficult as the distillation of pure water, which could then be distilled into H2, and the compression of the H2 into supercooled containers (which noone has adequately invented yet)? Fuel cells haven't even been invented which can stand a bumpy car ride let alone a crash.
When you consider the inefficency of ethanol consider that the gasoline it replaces is inefficently transported six-thousand miles to get to your gas tank.
Nuclear fusion, unfortunately cannot be considered in this argument as a valid alternative because so far it only works at forty-million degrees, however if it was part of this argument, it would annhilate all competition because the ridiculously abundant fuel sources including the entire ocean, and the entire surface of the moon, along with the huge amounts of clean energy produced would be absolutely beyond competition from other alternatives. Unfortunately nuclear fusion may be much more than a long way off.
I pale when I hear environmentalists bemoan nuclear fission, however. The wastes of fission are so miniscule and concentrated that they can actually be dropped off at the bottoms of existing mine shafts and eventually destroyed by the heat and pressure inside the earth. The energy produced is perfectly clean, and as for safety, does anyone care to guess how many reactors are operating, have been operating for decades with no problems?
Another Big argument with hydrogen.
As of 2004, 50% of the electricity produced in the United States comes from coal, 20% comes from nuclear, 18% from natural gas, 7% from hydroelectricity, 3% from petroleum and the remaining 3% mostly coming from geothermal, solar and biomass.
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/epa/figes2.htmlBut oh yeah! we have all those dams.