Saturday, 30 April 2022

Chance for a massive swing?

 

Friday, 29 April 2022

Innovative Chinese EV battery scheme has come to Europe

 Readers of this blog will be aware that Norway has, per head of population, the highest ownership of electric vehicles in the world. It is probably Tesla's largest export market. So it was natural last year for Chinese manufacturer Nio to launch its assault on the European EV market from Norway. Their USP is the way that batteries are paid for and the speedy recharging facility that stems from it.

Nio’s BaaS model means that a customer pays less for the new car but signs up to a monthly subscription model that means they can simply swap batteries when their charge is nearing depletion.


However, in addition to the benefit of simply being able to swap out a depleted battery, Nio also claims that by splitting out a lower purchase price for the vehicle from the battery subscription, the company is nevertheless offering a lower running cost than a combustion engine equivalent.


Nio officially launched its flagship ES8 SUV in Norway back in September, with a starting price of NOK609,000 [(£52,074)] with the 75kWh standard-range battery, and NOK 679,000 [(£58,035)] with the 100kWh long-range battery, which boosts total range to 500-kilometres (WLTP).


By the end of 2022, Nio plans to have built 20 Power Swap stations across the country, covering Norway’s five largest cities and their main roads.

Wednesday, 27 April 2022

Female hormones as an asthma trigger

 BBC Wales News today drew attention to a distressing aspect of asthma which is still a mystery. The impact of hormones on asthma during the menstrual cycle is not peculiar to Wales, but with the closure of Asthma Cymru a few years ago, the impetus for research here has been reduced. It is also surprising that with so many women engaged in asthma research, more priority has not been given to investigate something that possibly affects half the population of young adult asthma sufferers.


Monday, 25 April 2022

Andrew Tutton

 I have just learned that veteran local politician, Andrew Tutton affectionately known as King Tut, has just died. He was in his seventh contest for his home ward of Port Talbot, where he was first elected as a Ratepayer when the county borough of Neath Port Talbot was inaugurated at the turn of the century. Latterly he campaigned as an Independent. 

My commiserations and sympathy to his family and friends.

 

Wednesday, 20 April 2022

Hardly unreserved apologies

It is gratifying to see that the i had the same reaction to prime minister Johnson's so-called "unreserved apology". The same goes for Rishi Sunak's misuse of the term when he also sought to justify his behaviour during "partygate".

As to his weak justification for staying in post ("don't you know there's a war on"), various media have been swift to point out that PMs have been changed before in conflicts moreover in which we have been directly engaged. It is not as if he had been effective in stopping the carnage in Ukraine. Indeed, his failure over his first two years in office to stop Putin's pet oligarchs making free use of the City of London "laundromat" helped fund Putin's war. 

Is it too much to hope that the rank-and-file of the Conservative party in Westminster will rise up to do their patriotic duty and install a person of honour in No. 10?


Tuesday, 19 April 2022

Does Putin really want to see himself ranked with Hitler and Genghis Khan?

 Bloomberg reports:

Ukraine and Russia together account for about a quarter of the world’s grain trade, and disruption to shipments from the Black Sea region is bringing turmoil to the global market.

With the price of corn at a decade high and wheat soaring, the United Nations has warned an additional 13 million people could be left undernourished. Drought-affected countries across the Horn of Africa are likely to be the hardest hit, the World Food Programme says.

The threat to the remaining Black Sea ports from which grain is exported, and the grain stores in those cities, is very real. By continuing his destructive attrition of Ukraine, Putin is jeopardising the lives of people far away who have no part in his quarrel with the West.

Having laid waste Mariupol, he is resisting entreaties from humanitarian organisations around the world to allow the few thousand remaining citizens and defending soldiers to be evacuated. He is demanding their total surrender, with no guarantees as to how they will be treated in Russian custody. One trusts that Lavrov reflects the official policy when he asserts that Russia will use only conventional weapons in her renewed offensive against Ukraine. That should rule out not only nuclear, chemical and biological weapons but also the use of thermobaric weapons which would visit excruciating death on those sheltering in the tunnels beneath the old steel works in Mariupol. 

Thursday, 14 April 2022

Buy an electric van and save 25% on running costs

That is the recent claim of an environmental group. It may well be true, but one has to take into account the higher capital cost of a new electric van. There is also the difficulty of the dearth of public charging stations as Peter Black has highlighted many times, most recently here and here.

A Radio 4 programme aimed at debunking excessive claims by advertisers looked at the cost of replacing a conventional car mid-life with its electric equivalent (a Vauxhall Corsa was the chosen example) as against waiting until the vehicle was no longer viable. They found that the latter course cost less, but still found that the pay-back time was 11 years. 

That pay-back time may be less in the case of a commercial vehicle which does many more miles than the average family car, but we are still expecting a degree of altruism on the part of operators in asking them to make the switch. Government needs to do more to ensure that there is a dense network of charging stations and in keeping the cost of electricity supply down. Only then will pioneering companies like Stevens of Port Talbot take off, as they deserve to do.


Tuesday, 12 April 2022

Salter the earth (sorry!)

 From a Glamorgan CCC bulletin:

By completing a career-best 7-45 against Durham at Cardiff, Andrew Salter returned the best bowling figures by a spin bowler for Glamorgan for thirty years, with his analysis being the best since 1992 when Robert Croft claimed 8-66 against Warwickshire at Swansea. (writes Andrew Hignell) [I was there! - FHL}

Andrew’s figures were also the best for the Welsh county in first-class cricket since Timm van Gugten claimed 7-42 at the same ground against Kent in 2018, and the best by a homegrown bowler since David Harrison also claimed 7-45 against Worcestershire at New Road in 2010.

His spell included a sequence of 6-22 in 27 balls and when he bowled Matthew Potts it was Andrew’s 100th first-class wicket for the Welsh county.

Will the England selectors take notice? Andrew Salter is also a useful batsman. Batting is clearly the department of England's game which needs urgent attention.