Fall 2024

Electric Vehicles: How Green Are They?

From the Set Current Topics by ReferencePoint Press

Electric vehicles are being promoted worldwide as an environmentally-friendly way to reduce fossil fuel use and fight climate change. However, electric vehicles are not a perfect solution. They can release pollution and emissions into the environment, depending on how they are manufactured and charged.

Format List Price Your Price Qty
$45.26 $33.95
Interest Level Grade 6 - Grade 12
Reading Level Grade 6
Dewey Number 629.22
Lexile
ATOS Reading Level
Guided Reading Level
Language English
Publisher ReferencePoint Press
Format Reinforced book
ISBN 9781678207922
Copyright 2025
Number of Pages 64
Dimensions 6.5 x 9.25
Graphics Full-color photographs

Kirkus Review of Electric Vehicles: How Green Are They?

A thought-provoking comparison of the costs and benefits of electric vehicles. Against the obvious advantages of vehicles that don’t create toxic emissions and use little to no fossil fuels, Mooney weighs many of the hidden costs. Such costs range from serious human rights violations related to where cobalt and other essential materials used in batteries are mined to the fact that most of the ever-increasing amount of electricity used in manufacturing and recharging EVs is currently generated by power plants that use coal or natural gas. Still, along with citing a recent study estimating that EVs make up for the carbon footprint of their manufacturing process in about two years of use, the author paints an optimistic picture of ongoing efforts to reduce EVs’ drawbacks even further. As examples, she points to Norway, where 96% of all electric power is already generated by hydropower, an MIT research project on making batteries entirely from organic materials, a pilot project in Detroit where a roadway wirelessly recharges EVs, and more. Readers who think that the case for switching to EVs is obvious will appreciate the author’s judicious and nuanced observations, all based on official reports and other authoritative publications. Sparse stock photos break up the text, showing some of the technology under development and other relevant scenes.

Author: Carla Mooney