auraslip
10 MW
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2010
- Messages
- 3,535
I have some very strict environmentalist friends. They think my electric bike is a sort of blasphemy. Well maybe not that far, but still their zealotry gets annoying.
We will assume the carbon footprint of both a bicycle and a lithium powered electric bicycle traveling 25 km in one hour at 25 Kph
Carbon foot print of electric bikes:
Industrial coal creates 0.313 kg per kWh
According to ebikes.ca, after all inefficiencies in power deliver, charging, and motors are calculated ebikes are %25 efficient.
According to various calculators, 25kph would take at the most 200 watts to sustain.
So 200w / %25 = .8 kWh / .313 kg is 2.5 kg of CO2e per 25 km
Carbon foot print of bicycles:
"It takes 13 Kcal of fossil fuel inputs to produce everyone 1 Kcal of food we eat, and 25 Kcar per Kcal of meat." Also you should note from the pdf that CO2e from live stock accounts for %18 of all green house gases. Since many of my friends are vegetarians let us go with the ration of 13 Kcal to 1 Kcal, but remember that this doesn't include CO2e from livestock, the release of trapped carbon from agriculture, and other sources; Just from fossil fuel inputs.
Calculating the CO2e of those 13 Kcal is beyond the scope of this exercise, so lets just use diesel's 1kg of CO2e per 0.253 kWh.
According to various calculators, it should take 120w to sustain 25 kph.
A cyclist is around %22 efficient.
So 120w / %22 = .545 kWh / %.076 (1/13) = 7.17 kWh / .253 = 28.3 kg CO2e per kph
Can someone check the math here for me, and try to find some better sources? These results seem..... INSANE
A comprehensive breakdown of the manufacturing costs of bicycles and electric bicycles is out of the scope of this article. While it is true the additional components of the electric bicycle does increase their carbon footprint, in the end it is only a fraction of the amount required to operate them.
We will assume the carbon footprint of both a bicycle and a lithium powered electric bicycle traveling 25 km in one hour at 25 Kph
Carbon foot print of electric bikes:
Industrial coal creates 0.313 kg per kWh
According to ebikes.ca, after all inefficiencies in power deliver, charging, and motors are calculated ebikes are %25 efficient.
According to various calculators, 25kph would take at the most 200 watts to sustain.
So 200w / %25 = .8 kWh / .313 kg is 2.5 kg of CO2e per 25 km
Carbon foot print of bicycles:
"It takes 13 Kcal of fossil fuel inputs to produce everyone 1 Kcal of food we eat, and 25 Kcar per Kcal of meat." Also you should note from the pdf that CO2e from live stock accounts for %18 of all green house gases. Since many of my friends are vegetarians let us go with the ration of 13 Kcal to 1 Kcal, but remember that this doesn't include CO2e from livestock, the release of trapped carbon from agriculture, and other sources; Just from fossil fuel inputs.
Calculating the CO2e of those 13 Kcal is beyond the scope of this exercise, so lets just use diesel's 1kg of CO2e per 0.253 kWh.
According to various calculators, it should take 120w to sustain 25 kph.
A cyclist is around %22 efficient.
So 120w / %22 = .545 kWh / %.076 (1/13) = 7.17 kWh / .253 = 28.3 kg CO2e per kph
Can someone check the math here for me, and try to find some better sources? These results seem..... INSANE

A comprehensive breakdown of the manufacturing costs of bicycles and electric bicycles is out of the scope of this article. While it is true the additional components of the electric bicycle does increase their carbon footprint, in the end it is only a fraction of the amount required to operate them.