Korean electric vehicle solution
The Advanced Institute of Science and
Technology (KAIST) have developed an electric transport system where the
vehicles get their power needs from cables underneath the surface of the road
via non-contact magnetic charging. Besides potentially saving Korea a lot of money by reducing crude oil imports,
widespread adoption of the technology also offers the potential of improving
air quality in currently polluted cities for example those in China.
The drive towards adoption of the
electric vehicle as a popular and viable means of transport is beginning to
highlight a few potential road blocks which may not be enough to halt progress
but may require some inventive thinking. Limitations on battery size and power,
the issue of battery weight, the range of an electric vehicle between charges,
how long it takes to recharge the batteries, and not forgetting the
availability of charging points and who foots the bill - all currently hot
topics in the world of electric vehicle creation.
There's also a resource issue
waiting in the wings to raise its problematic head some time soon. As more
vehicles become reliant on drawing their power from batteries, supplies of the
compounds and metals on which they are based may become less and less readily
available. Dwindling stocks of things like lithium could start to command
increasingly high prices and lead to electric vehicles pricing themselves out
of the automotive marketplace. May be engineers around the world could pick a leaf and work on such green solutions, or they could just solve some of the bottle necks. MY REFERENCE

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