For years we have been told that electric vehicles (EVs) are the future. Buy one and you'll be helping to save the planet. Governments subsidise them, manufacturers market them as "zero emissions", and many buyers proudly believe they are making an environmentally responsible choice.
But what if that isn't the whole story?
A thought-provoking article by Adam Creighton in The Australian, titled "EVs might feel right for the wealthy, but they will destroy our planet", challenges much of the conventional wisdom surrounding electric vehicles. It is well worth reading in full if you have access to The Australian, because it raises questions that rarely receive much attention in the mainstream discussion.
Zero emissions... or simply zero tailpipe emissions?
Perhaps the biggest misconception is the phrase "zero emissions."
An EV produces no exhaust emissions while driving. That much is true.
However, manufacturing the vehicle—particularly its battery—requires enormous quantities of energy and raw materials. The plastics, synthetic fabrics and many other components are still derived from petroleum products. An EV does not magically escape dependence on fossil fuels simply because it lacks an exhaust pipe.
The hidden environmental cost
Figures from the International Energy Agency show that an electric vehicle requires roughly six times more mineral content than a conventional petrol vehicle. These include lithium, nickel, cobalt and graphite, all of which must be mined somewhere.
That mining comes with real environmental consequences:
destruction of forests
removal of huge quantities of earth
pollution of waterways
habitat loss
enormous energy consumption
Unlike carbon dioxide projections decades into the future, these environmental impacts are immediate and visible.
The irony, is that many environmentally conscious consumers may unknowingly be contributing to significant ecological damage occurring thousands of kilometres away.
Mining on an unprecedented scale
Replacing the world's billions of conventional vehicles with battery-powered equivalents would require an extraordinary expansion of mining.
Research by Frontier Economics suggesting that the transition to EVs would dramatically increase demand for critical minerals, with major environmental consequences in countries such as Indonesia, Chile, Africa and Papua New Guinea.
One example is nickel production in Indonesia, where large areas of rainforest are reportedly being cleared while much of the refining process itself is powered by coal-fired electricity.
This raises an uncomfortable question.
Are we simply exporting environmental damage from wealthy countries to poorer nations?
The forgotten environmentalists
Modern environmental campaigns often focus almost exclusively on carbon emissions.
Yet environmental protection used to include:
preserving forests
protecting rivers
conserving wildlife
reducing mining scars
maintaining biodiversity
These concerns have not disappeared simply because climate change has become the dominant political issue.
Creighton argues that carbon dioxide has become the only environmental metric that governments seem willing to measure.
Subsidies and market distortion
The article also questions why taxpayers should subsidise one technology over another.
EV buyers currently benefit from various incentives, exemptions and subsidies while contributing little or nothing to fuel excise—the tax traditionally used to help fund Australia's roads. If EVs are genuinely the superior technology, they should succeed without heavy government assistance.
There is still debate
None of this proves that conventional petrol vehicles are environmentally perfect.
Nor does it prove that EVs always have a higher total environmental footprint over their entire lifetime. Researchers continue to debate whole-of-life emissions, and the answer depends on factors such as electricity generation, battery lifespan and recycling technology.
What the article does highlight is that the environmental conversation has become far too one-dimensional.
If the only thing we measure is carbon dioxide, we risk ignoring:
landscape destruction
toxic mining waste
deforestation
geopolitical dependence on critical minerals
human and environmental costs borne by developing nations
These are genuine environmental issues too.
The Bottom Line
Electric vehicles are not the simple, clean, guilt-free solution many politicians would have us believe.
Every technology involves trade-offs.
Rather than pretending EVs are environmentally "free", governments should encourage an honest debate about their full environmental impact—from the mine to the factory to the showroom.
If we're serious about protecting the planet, we need to look beyond what comes out of a car's tailpipe and consider the damage that may already have been done long before the vehicle ever reaches the road.
If you can access it, I recommend reading Adam Creighton's full article in The Australian. Whether you ultimately agree with his conclusions or not, it presents arguments that deserve to be part of the broader discussion rather than dismissed because they challenge the prevailing narrative.






