All posts by b nice

Semper Doctrina—we are always improving and adapting.

On this day March 18

Today in History

  • 1990 East Germany holds its first and only free parliamentary elections

    The election was held between the peaceful revolution leading to the demise of the German Democratic Republic in 1989 and the German reunification in 1990.

  • 1971 A 100 feet (30 meter) high wave destroys a Peruvian mining camp and kills hundreds of people

    The tsunami was caused by a massive rock avalanche that crashed into Lake Yanahuani from a height of 1300 feet (400 meters).

  • 1965 Russian cosmonaut Aleksei Leonov becomes the first person to walk in space

    During the tethered spacewalk, which lasted 12 minutes, Leonov ventured up to 10 meters from his spacecraft, Voskhod 2.

  • 1962 The Évian Accords are signed, ending the Algerian War

    Algeria gained its independence from France as a consequence.

  • 1892 Lord Stanley of Preston pledges to donate a challenge cup for the best ice hockey team in Canada

Police seek public assistance

Story Harvested From Saint John Police Dept
Police seek public assistance in two property crime investigations that could be connected

 

File#: 24-1658, 1681

The Saint John Police Major Crime Unit are currently investigating two property crime incidents that occurred in the Loch Lomond Road area in East Saint John.

It is alleged that:

24-1658
On March 10, 2024, at approximately 3:26 a.m., property was stolen from a number of vehicles parked at a commercial site in the 200 block of St Martins Road. One of the vehicles was significantly damaged during this incident.

Surveillance video shows a suspect that appears to be wearing dark colored pants and a jacket with reflective material on it. There appears to be a blue hooded sweater underneath the jacket with the hood pulled up over the suspect’s head.

24-1681
On March 10, 2024, at approximately 3:43 a.m., several sheds had been broken into at a property located in the 4000 block of Loch Lomond Road. Surveillance shows a dark colored SUV parked behind the property and the suspect appears to be wearing dark colored clothing with reflective material on the jacket.

The Major Crime Unit are investigating. Detectives believe that these incidents are connected due to the proximity and timing of the crimes as well as the description of the suspect who appears on the video surveillance.

If you can identify the suspect in the photographs or, anyone with information is asked to contact the Saint John Police Force at 1-506-648-3333, or if you wish to remain anonymous, contact Crimestoppers at 1-800-222-8477 or 1-800-222-T.I.P.S.

Electric Vehicle ‘Euphoria is Dead

To the Surprise of No One

FILE - A group of Tesla cars line up at charging stations at a dealership in Littleton, Co
AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File
 

“Automakers from Ford Motor and General Motors to Mercedes-Benz, Volkswagen, Jaguar Land Rover and Aston Martin are scaling back or delaying their electric vehicle plans,” reports CNBC.

The headline says it all: “EV euphoria is dead. Automakers are scaling back or delaying their electric vehicle plans.”

Yeah, there’s a shock.

Gee, why-oh-why would people not want to purchase a super-expensive vehicle that can take more than an hour to charge — and that’s if you can find a charging station?

For years, the automotive industry has been in a state of EV euphoria. Automakers trotted out optimistic sales forecasts for electric models and announced ambitious targets for EV growth. Wall Street boosted valuations for legacy automakers and startup entrants alike, based in part on their visions for an EV future.

Now the hype is dwindling, and companies are again cheering consumer choice. Automakers from Ford Motor and General Motors to Mercedes-Benz, Volkswagen, Jaguar Land Rover and Aston Martin are scaling back or delaying their electric vehicle plans.

Even U.S. EV leader Tesla, which is estimated to have accounted for 55% of EV sales in the country in 2023, is bracing for what “may be a notably lower” rate of growth, CEO Elon Musk said in late January.

There is a host of other problems. Consumers are discovering a fully charged car does not last for as many miles as advertised. Cities are discovering their electric grids are in no shape to handle all the extra juice needed to power millions of electric vehicles.

EV sales are still expected to increase. Last year, they represented 1.2 million sales in the U.S. or 7.6 percent of total car sales. By 2030, that number is expected to climb somewhere between 30 and 39 percent (which still seems Pollyanna-ish to me). The movement now appears to be towards hybrids, which offer the best of both worlds. You have your battery and your gas-powered engine as a backup.

“EVs may be ‘the future’ but are struggling in the present,” per Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas. “Hybrid sales are growing 5x faster than EVs in the US.”

The early adopters, the smug environmentalists and the trendy rich, have already bought in. Now, the car manufacturers have to encourage normal people, and we’re a little more circumspect. Do these cars really save you money? Sure, but only if you drive enough miles over ten whole years. At the same time, while EVs can cost less to maintain, they can also cost more to repair.

If you have a set routine, I get it. You unplug, drive from home to work, to the grocery store, to the gym, back to home, and plug back in. That makes sense for an EV. But the moment you have to drive outside of that comfort zone, it’s stress-out time. Will I find a charger along my route? Will the charger work? Will there be a line? How long will it take?

Naturally, the leftist Biden administration still plans to force the car industry into adopting impossible fuel standards and fining them billions if not met.

The Allance for Automotive Innovation weighed in:

The Alliance for Automotive Innovation, which represents General Motors, Toyota Motor, Volkswagen, Hyundai and others, said the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Corporate Average Fuel Economy proposal “exceeds maximum feasibility” and that the agency projects “manufacturers will pay over $14 billion in non-compliance penalties between 2027 and 2032.”

Another estimate says, “such regulations would cost GM $6.5 billion in fines and Jeep parent Stellantis $3 billion. Ford’s “penalties would total about $1 billion.”

All of this, of course, will be passed on to the consumer,

This is the Green Religion, a fanatical faith that has nothing to do with science or economics. Democrats refuse to increase their electric grid even as they demand we buy electric cars that put more demand on the electric grid.