The Future of Electric Vehicles in The World Dominated by Fossil Fuels

Hesti Wu
3 min readSep 5, 2022
Photo by Hyundai Motor Group

Electric vehicles are a great solution to our oil-powered society.

They can help us reduce our carbon emissions, improve air quality, and make driving safer for everyone on the road. But electric cars aren’t just for environmentalists — they also offer some benefits over their fossil fuel counterparts.

There is more than one reason to dislike the fossil fuels.

The first is that they are finite resources, and when they run out, we’re all screwed. That’s why we need to start using alternative energy sources now and stop using them as soon as possible. Secondly, fossil fuels cause global warming which causes all sorts of problems like melting ice caps, rising sea levels and more extreme weather patterns (including hurricanes). Finally, if you’re an environmentalist or pro-green activist then you know that burning fossil fuels pollutes our air with greenhouse gases like CO2 which leads us into a world where no one can breathe clean air anymore.

EVs are good for the environment.

Electric vehicles (EVs) are much cleaner than gasoline-fueled vehicles. The emissions from an EV are zero, as there’s no tailpipe emissions from the vehicle itself. Additionally, EVs do not pollute the air and use fossil fuels that can cause global warming and climate change.

Oil is a finite resource that must be extracted from underground deposits in order to create gasoline or diesel fuel for cars and trucks. This extraction process requires heavy machinery that pollutes local soil with toxic substances like arsenic and mercury; it also damages groundwater supplies over time by leaking into underground aquifers where water is stored during rainy seasons when production cannot meet demand levels. In contrast to this destructive process of extracting oil at great cost to society overall, electric vehicles don’t require any such laborious extraction processes because they run purely on batteries which contain no harmful metals whatsoever.

There is a lot of work being done in the EV industry.

The companies are working on new battery technology, charging technology and vehicle design. They are also working on infrastructure to support the cars and software to control them.

Electric vehicles have a bright future as long as we make it so.

It is important to note that electric vehicles are here to stay. The cost of EVs has decreased significantly over the past few years, and now they are cheaper than gasoline-fueled cars. This means that more people will be able to afford them and make use of them in their daily lives.

Furthermore, electric vehicles produce no pollution or greenhouse gases at all during operation (unlike an internal combustion engine). The only emission produced by an EV is heat given off when charging batteries; however, this can be mitigated by using renewable resources such as wind power or solar energy instead of fossil fuels like oil and coal used in traditional engines.

Finally, electric cars are safer than gas-powered ones because there’s no risk of fire if something goes wrong with your car’s electrical system — which happens far less often than when you have a gas tank full. In addition to these benefits listed above there are many others including lower maintenance costs due to fewer moving parts required for operation plus greater fuel efficiency thanks again mostly because there aren’t any moving parts needed anymore either way so overall this makes buying into an EV very worthwhile investment decision especially considering how far along we’ve come already since its inception decades ago back then.

There are good reasons to get rid of fossil fuels and move toward EVs, but it isn’t going to happen overnight.

We need a lot more research into how these cars work, what kind of batteries we will need in order for them to be considered viable options for everyday life, and many other factors before we can truly say that EVs have arrived on par with traditional gas-powered cars. But if you think about where we were five years ago — when no one would even consider buying an EV because they weren’t seen as being safe enough or efficient enough — you can see how quickly things change when people start paying attention.

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Hesti Wu

a lifelong learner trying to get by in life, finally coming out from the shell and start writing.