Evolution of the Automobile - Part 3: Electric Dreams: The Environmental Revolution (1996-Present)

Evolution: The Birth and Development of Motion Pictures ← Series Home Key Takeaways GM's EV1 (1996): Demonstrated electric vehicle viability but was controversially discontinued and crushed. Tesla's Roadster (2008): Proved EVs could be desirable, high-performance vehicles, not just eco-compromises. Dieselgate (2015): Crushed diesel's reputation and accelerated the shift toward electric vehicles. Battery technology: Advances dramatically reduced costs and extended range, making EVs practical. Government policies: Environmental concerns are rapidly accelerating EV adoption globally. For over a century, the internal combustion engine dominated automotive transportation. Gasoline and diesel engines became so refined, so embedded in infrastructure and culture, that alternatives seemed impossible. But environmental pressures, technological breakthroughs, and visionary entrepreneurs are now rewriting automotive history. ...

A massive, sprawling landscape filled entirely with discarded electronic waste under a hazy, polluted sky

The Engineered Expiration – Part 4: From Corporate Profit to Corporate Crime: The Environmental Cost of Artificial Limits

Planned Obsolescence 1 The Engineered Expiration – Part 1: How Designed Decay Became the Core Business Model 2 The Engineered Expiration – Part 2: Software Lock-Ins and the Digital Decay of Connected Devices 3 The Engineered Expiration – Part 3: Dismantling the Fix-It Culture Through Planned Repair Prevention 4 The Engineered Expiration – Part 4: From Corporate Profit to Corporate Crime: The Environmental Cost of Artificial Limits 5 The Engineered Expiration – Part 5: The Regulatory Tide: Right to Repair and the Global Push for Longevity ← Series Home The Paradox of Profitable Destruction Planned obsolescence, while a common business strategy designed to bolster private profit, simultaneously carries far-reaching ecological and social consequences. The practice creates an inherent tension because in the short term, manufacturers gain competitive advantage and extract maximum profit through continuous updated product models. Yet, this narrow focus is achieved at the expense of consumer interests and environmental sustainability, leaving the product prematurely obsolete and destined for the waste heap. This intersection of legal corporate activity leading to massive societal and ecological harm raises critical questions about corporate accountability. ...