Categories: NewsTechnology

China Plans to Ban All Fossil Fuel Cars

China has been on a warpath to ban many different things lately. Recently the price of Bitcoin was affected drastically because of the country’s latest “we are banning Bitcoin” stunt, but also from its recent condemnation of ICOs and potential ban of cryptocurrency exchanges themselves. However, China’s love of banning things is not limited just to the financial sector. The country will likely ban the sale of fossil fuel cars soon as well.

A Noble Ban

While I think China’s recent banning binge is getting a bit out of hand – they even want to ban some soft cheeses – banning fossil fuel cars will have huge implications for global health and the environment. Many of us are familiar with the horrifying photos of the smog problems in major Chinese cities. It appears that the government is now very concerned with cleaning up the air and keeping it clean.

The proposal to ban polluting automobiles will be implemented in stages over the course of some years to allow automakers the opportunity to retool their factories and adjust their marketing strategies. This could very well set a new trend in the global automotive market considering how many cars are made in China. If one of the largest vehicle production countries in the world were to begin making only electric cars, many others may follow suit. A Japanese car company, Honda, is already working on building an all-electric vehicle for the Chinese market. This is just one example of how this ban will force the world to reconsider producing and using vehicles powered by combustion engines.

Related Post

In an effort to provide even more of an incentive to go green, the Chinese government will provide generous subsidies to electric automotive makers. There also will likely be a cap and trade system put in place for companies to buy or sell emission quantities in order to help them along the way.

This comes at a time when many other nations are showcasing their plans to meet mandated emissions cuts by 2030. China has already taken on some of the more drastic cuts in its production and manufacturing sector. Frankly, it is impressive to see China do this so readily when certain western nations continue to drag their feet the entire way.

Will It Be Enough?

While it is great in my mind that China is looking to ban fossil fuel-powered cars, I also know that the electricity required to charge those batteries has to come from somewhere. China’s electricity production is still very heavily reliant on fossil fuels. The country is working on rolling these back as well, but it is still something to consider. If everyone driving a car in China were suddenly to charge his or her vehicle, that would add a previously unknown strain on the power grid. Power plants would likely have to increase their production and output just to meet the demand from all those vehicles. This may just serve to offset the carbon cost from one industry to another. Regardless, it is an interesting development and one of the more sane bans that China has announced recently.

Dariusz

Dariusz has been closely following the world of cryptocurrencies since 2014. He has been somewhat of a crypto-evangelist, trying to educate more people on the exciting realm of cryptocurrency.

Share
Published by
Dariusz
Tags: CarsChina

Recent Posts

Bitcoin Crashes Below $67,000 as $700 Million Wiped From Crypto Market in Hours

Bitcoin is bleeding. The world's largest cryptocurrency plunged to $66,997 on Tuesday, shedding over $6,750…

2 hours ago

Ripple’s RLUSD Goes Live in Türkiye, Hits $1.7 Billion Market Cap

Ripple is not pausing for breath. The company has brought its dollar-pegged stablecoin, $RLUSD, to…

6 hours ago

Bitwise Launches Its First Tokenized Fund With $259M in Assets and 4% Annual Yield

Bitwise Asset Management has just made its first move into tokenized funds, and it comes…

1 day ago

Binance Launches US Stocks and ETFs Trading for Non-US Users With Zero Commission

Binance just made a move that blurs the line between crypto exchange and traditional brokerage…

1 day ago

NEAR Protocol Ships Confidential Payments, Crosses $19B in Intents Volume, and Partners With Bermuda Government

NEAR Protocol has had a month that most blockchain projects would stretch across an entire…

2 days ago

Chainlink Records 7 New Integrations Across 6 Services and 4 Chains

Something is becoming increasingly clear about Chainlink, the integrations are not slowing down. The protocol…

2 days ago