Re: EV
Nothing is green. Billions of dollars of infrastructure, tooling, materials and machines are never green.
They are *greener* under certain assumptions, that's as far as it goes.
And pushing off the "dirty" bit to a regulated industry on a few sites where treatment and capture can be legislated and done at scale is far better than pushing diesel fumes past primary schools, and this will be true NO MATTER if the final emissions are less or not (and they are less, but obviously never zero).
Fact is the EV is greener locally, and as green nationally as the energy supply used to charge it.
I have solar panels. If I use them to charge an EV (unlikely, to be honest, they will merely help a little), that's better than the entire oil infrastructure and then burning it in children's faces. However, where does my panel come from? China. What's the green credentials of that panel? No idea. They could be melting down orphans for all I know.
The "green" doesn't factor into people's decisions for this, the only green that matters is that in their wallet (as the article says, 2/3rds are more concerned about financial cost than anything else). And, to be fair, that's always going to be that way, and always has been. The most green tech in the world won't take off until I can see a way to save money on it - either by avoiding a tax, having a cheaper car to run, or lowering my electricity bills. Everything else pales in comparison to that type of green.
Fact is, it's not going to be long before EVs are cheaper than cars (whether artificially or not), and running them is already cheaper, and charging at home is cheaper than charging at public stations, and charging at home if you have solar is even cheaper. And that's exactly where everyone is headed.
Unfortunately at this precise moment in time, running a hybrid is actually cheaper once you take into account purchase costs.