Equilibrium & Sustainability

Equilibrium/Sustainability — New high-speed train ‘flies on the ground’

A new Chinese prototype train could one day transport passengers between the country’s far-flung, populous cities at more than 600 miles per hour.

The new-model form of mass transit — developed by the state-run China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation — integrates two distinct technologies to try to solve the main obstacles to moving ground-level transport at such high speeds, according to the South China Morning Post. 

First, it seeks to remove the friction between the wheels and truck by means of magnetic levitation — or “maglev” — in which similarly charged magnets in the track and body of the train push each other apart, creating a friction-free cushion for the train to float on. 

Second, it removes air resistance by means of sealed tunnels from which the air has been pumped out — mimicking the thin atmospheres traversed by high-flying aircraft.

These two innovations together would allow trains to “fly on the ground,” the government engineers said in a statement.   

Critics note that this sort of “hyperloop” system is incredibly expensive and requires immense investment in infrastructure, the Morning Post noted. 

But it also neatly sidesteps the immense challenge of finding a zero-carbon fuel for air travel, which is currently the only high-speed means of moving between the widespread population centers of China — or the United States. 

Welcome to Equilibrium, a newsletter that tracks the growing global battle over the future of sustainability. I’m Saul Elbein

Today we look at why a Republican midterm victory could paint a target on Democratic climate goals, followed by a look at why Toyota may be forced to scrap and redo its electric vehicle strategy.

Plus: A new push to make ostensibly “clean” fuels from fracked gas. 

GOP targets clean energy stimulus in midterm bid

Republicans seeking to recapture Congress are targeting the trillions of dollars in Democratic-backed spending in areas like coronavirus relief, student loans and nondefense funding, our colleagues Aris Foley and Mychael Schnell reported.

Point of crisis: If they recapture Congress, Republicans could hold up the federal budgetary process to force Democrats to cut stimulus spending for everything but the military, according to Foley and Schnell. 

Pumping it up: One major priority for an expected Republican majority will likely be to attempt to incentivize a new flood of American oil and gas production.

Harder than it sounds: The prospects of gas prices decreasing through energy independence in the short term, however, are slim. 

That’s a long enough time scale to worry the potential developers of new fields — particularly with utilities, carmakers and manufacturers increasingly eying renewable energy alternatives. 

Avoiding risk: One particular concern is the rising numbers of insurers, reinsurers and financiers who are growing wary of oil and gas, as we reported last week. 

By contrast, the amount of money currently slated for oil and gas development would be enough to finance sufficient renewable development to keep the world on the
1.5 degree pathway, the IISD study found.

Toyota considers return to EV drawing board 

A faster-than-expected rise in electric vehicle demand has Japanese automaker Toyota considering a complete overhaul in its EV strategy.  

The company could reboot a $38 billion plan for a new line of EVs in order to better compete with rivals like Tesla, Reuters reported. 

Those quotas would be enough to make Toyota’s offerings about one-third electric, Reuters reported. 

What’s wrong with that? EVs are taking off faster than expected — so fast that half of all new cars sold in 2030 are expected to be electric, according to Reuters.  Toyota’s existing strategy can’t meet those kinds of totals. 

Trade-off: While halting production to revamp Toyota’s EV plans could mean losing years of sales, it might be worth it in exchange for a more efficient and cost-effective production later this decade, experts told Reuters.

COMPETITION LEADS TESLA TO CUT PRICES IN CHINA 

Tesla’s stocks slid on Monday behind announcements that the company was offering discounts on cars produced at its Shanghai factory — an unusual move from a company whose prices have generally trended up. 

Shares drop: Tesla’s shares fell more than 7 percent on Monday morning following announcements that the company was cutting prices for Chinese buyers, CNBC reported. 

Why cut prices? Chief executive Elon Musk said last week that price cuts were necessary as China faces “a recession of sorts,” largely in the country’s overheated property markets, according to CNBC. 

But the all-electric car maker is also feeling pressure from a new wave of local rivals, the South China Morning Post reported. 

“In the face of new models launched by its Chinese rivals, price cuts will effectively enhance the competitiveness” of those offerings, Shanghai-based auto analyst Chen Jinzhu told the Morning Post. 

Demand side: Raising prices is an unusual move for Tesla, which has steadily increased prices in the past two years as demand grew faster than its ability to produce cars, clean energy news site Electrek reported. 

Excess gas to be repurposed as hydrogen fuel 

Excess fracked methane from the gas fields of North Dakota could soon be converted to hydrogen fuel to power long-haul trucks, according to a new memorandum of understanding released Monday morning. 

The deal unites gas producer Bakken Energy with power company Cummins and trucking and logistics company Schneider. They aim to work with upper Midwest states like Montana and North Dakota to create a new federally funded “hydrogen hub.”

New hub: The proposal is part of a larger play by producers in the Bakken Shale and other gas producing regions to take advantage of the $7 billion in federal funds for new industrial-scale production and use of hydrogen fuel.  

Looking to the future: “Our focus in developing clean hydrogen production is scale and affordability,” Bakken Energy chief executive Mike Hopkins said in a statement. 

Is it really clean? In one significant way, yes: Their tailpipe exhaust is water vapor. 

How so? As we have reported, hydrogen fuel has very different environmental costs depending on the source it comes from and the power used to make it, and this proposal would be at about the lowest standard.  

‘Blue hydrogen’: The Bakken, Cummins and Schneider plan would produce much more carbon-intensive fuel, called blue hydrogen, for which there are serious climate concerns. 

That’s if they can be built at all: Midwestern opponents of past oil pipelines like the Keystone XL and Dakota Access Pipeline are ratcheting up attempts to block carbon dioxide pipelines, Reuters reported.

Monday Miscellanies 

An off-grid solution in Gaza has toxic impacts, a challenge for NASA and a possible cause behind the increase in Alzheimer’s.  


Gaza battery dumps lead to environmental damage
  

Worries follow NASA asteroid-deflection success 

Ubiquitous toxic chemicals could be behind Alzheimer’s rise: scientists  

Please visit The Hill’s Sustainability section online and explore more newsletters here. We’ll see you tomorrow.