Don’t ban petrol - build better E-bikes instead
By Steve Rose
BikeSocial Publisher
24.10.2022
As far as we know the Department for Transport (DFT) is still proposing a ban on the sale of new petrol motorcycles after 2035. For motorcycles and scooters under 125cc the ban is proposed for 2030. After those dates you will only be able to buy new bikes that have zero tailpipe emissions, which means electric bikes or maybe Hydrogen (when the technology is commercially viable).
It's possibly the first time in recent history that legislation will force consumers to buy something they don’t want that might cost twice as much and be half as good without an alternative available. This isn’t a rant against progress but let’s not forget that;
We didn’t stop using coal to heat our homes because it was banned
We didn’t stop using horses for transport because they were banned
We didn’t stop sending letters by post because they were banned
We didn’t stop using landlines or buying magazines because they were banned
We did all of the above because something better came along that changed our behaviour and, in all cases, the old methods are still allowed, available and still in use.
But… it always takes a while to change our minds because the first generation of new technology is usually less good, more expensive and less convenient than what already exists.
And so, regardless of what Government thinks, we won’t stop riding petrol motorcycles because the sale of new ones will be banned in 13 years. We’ll just continue to ride old ones until the alternatives become better and cheaper.
So far, the shift to electric vehicles has been mostly in push bikes, e-scooters, small motorcycles and family cars. Electric car sales are increasing because of fleet sales and a wave of Chinese manufacturers selling well-specced EVs for similar prices to petrol and diesel models.
But the aviation, shipping and haulage industries are still reliant on fossil fuels and a recent projection from Bloomberg suggested that while 70-95% of bikes, cars, buses and light commercials are likely to be zero emissions by 2050 (when many countries have agreed to be Net Zero), the haulage industry will be stuck on 29%. And right now, there’s no proposed solution for aviation other than synthetic fuels.
Synthetic fuels are made using renewable energy to split water into Hydrogen and Oxygen and then combine the hydrogen with CO2 from Carbon-capture to make liquid compounds such as Methanol, which can be transported and stored safely and easily before being made into high grade, energy dense fuels for conventional ICE engines.
The production is massively inefficient, but, like all new things, it’s getting better. MotoGP has committed to use 100% synthetic fuels by 2027.
Motorcycles do fewer miles and have a considerably longer lifespan than cars so, we could still be riding the petrol bikes we buy in 2034 for a long time. Maybe we’ll become like Cuba, where decades of economic sanctions mean many residents still drive patched-up 1950s Cadillacs. In which case, the smart move is to buy a 1990s Honda now because they’ll be the last bikes still running after 50 years of this nonsense.
In the UK we have two major lobby groups fighting for motorcycling. The National Motorcycle Council (NMC) brings together most of the groups representing riders (including the BMF) to amplify the voice of its various members. The other is Motorcycle Action Group (MAG), which has a 50-year heritage of standing up for riders’ rights. MAG has a different personality to the NMC and, while we might not agree with all their causes, most of us are very happy they are out there fighting for us.
Both groups are pushing for the UK Government to broaden its thinking away from just electric bikes as an alternative and that the overall drive to Net Zero should be pro-business and pro-growth.
The NMC suggests that the UK needs to be aligned with other countries and aim for 2050 for Net Zero because motorcycling is a global business. MAG’s view is that there should be no ban at all on petrol motorcycles... ever, because our contribution to global warming is negligible. My hunch is that’s a negotiating ploy based on the thinking if you accept a date of, let’s say 2040, it becomes a negotiation, and you end up agreeing 2035.
Which is exactly what happened in 2022. There was talk of a ban for all new petrol bikes sold after 2035. The UK’s motorcycle industry association (MCIA) offered that if bigger bikes could remain till 2040, they would accept a ban on smaller bikes in 2030. The DFT accepted the 2030 proposal for smaller bikes but didn’t budge on the 2035 date for bigger ones. One-nil to the DFT.
It’s easy to side emotionally with the MAG perspective, but in the real world, there will be a proposed ban on petrol motorcycles by 2035 because that’s the final date for hybrid electric/petrol car sales. The date for pure petrol and diesel cars is currently proposed to be 2030.
That word ‘proposed’ is important though because the car industry is enormous and global and, while electric cars might representgrowing numbers of new car sales, that’s only a fraction of the total car park in the UK and it’ll be a long time before most of us can afford to buy one or have the ability to charge one easily if your house/flat has no designated parking.
The transition from fossil fuel to Net Zero in the UK will almost certainly run beyond 2035 because the authorities understand dates as a negotiating tool in the same way that MAG do. If they had stuck to the legally binding global 2050 deadline, the move to alternative powertrains would be even less enthusiastic.
What we need right now are smart global decisions to be made about the future of personal and industrial transport that look beyond battery-powered electric cars. The haulage and aviation industries are the keys to solving that problem.
Failing that it’ll be whichever of the manufacturers that the electric bike we all want who will change our hearts as well as our minds.
Because, whatever you, me or that gobby bloke down the pub says, if Honda launches an electric RC30 tomorrow that does 140mph, weighs 165kg, costs pennies to run, out accelerates a fighter jet, does 250 miles to a charge (which takes five minutes) and retails for £9995, we’ll be fighting in the queue to buy one.
And that’s the point. Again. We motorcyclists won’t easily give up petrol because we have to. The swap to electric will happen when we want to. Just like the adoption of four stroke engines, foot gear changes, ABS and suspension. We will gladly give up petrol when something better comes along.
In the meantime, read the responses to the DFT consultation from the NMC and MAG here.
Image - KarDesignKoncepts
Share on social media: