This! In always forget the exact number, but you're right: an amount of the largest cargo ships that's countable on your fingers and toes at most (6? 16? Less than 20, in any case) produce as much pollution as every single car in the world. And what are we doing? Regulating cars in rich countries. We must all buy a BEV now. Our old car will get sold to Africa or wherever, where they somehow magically stop polluting, one presumes.
Yet every time I point this out, this little fact gets ignored. Or worse, someone will pipe up with some reason why it's not possible to convert those ships to something cleaner. Yet, I ask you: what seems easier? Converting every single car on the entire planet to BEV, installing sufficient chargers to keep them all topped up, and beefing up the infrastructure (power grid) to handle the extra load, or... Converting 20 large cargo ships?
Don't get me wrong. I would love for a future where a BEV or similar zero-emissions vehicle would be practical. There is something to be said for reducing pollution in urban areas. We'd all love cleaner air. But right now they're too expensive compared to ICE cars (which often are already overpriced themselves), the range isn't there, charging takes too long, electricity prices are being kept artificially high because otherwise green energy production wouldn't be profitable,
So modern SUVs are selling 15% more than the year before, resulting in a 10% increase in CO2 emissions specifically within the SUV segment. Sounds plausible. From this I conclude that modern SUVs are cleaner than the old ones they replace by a significant margin. Otherwise a 15% sales increase would result in a 15% emissions increase, not 10%. Well, assuming all else remains equal, such as kilometers driven.
Yet somehow this results in a 20% increase in global emissions? That is over all sources of CO2 emissions, of which transportation is just a fraction, road transportation in turn being a fraction of that, and SUVs, again, being a fraction of that.
So, a fraction of a fraction of a fraction increases by 10%, yet somehow this causes the whole to increase by 20%? What? Ever heard of Amdahl's Law? Or just plain common sense?
Someone doesn't understand how math works, but desperately wants us to believe "da numbahs aww bààààd!". That someone isn't worth our time. Let that someone come back and present their arguments when they've replaced their activism with factivism.
In China you are guilty until proven innocent.
While China itself (meaning the government) is innocent despite being proven guilty.
Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (7) Well, it's an excellent idea, but it would make the compilers too hard to write.