> The above figures were all produced by assuming average or typical cases. To be fair, it is entirely possible for a bicycle rider to deliberately eat only locally grown and unprocessed foods. In that case, the ratio of primary energy to food calories is closer to 1:1 (Günther 3). Combined with a metabolic efficiency of 25%, this increases the human energy efficiency to 1:4, slightly better than the lithium-ion electric bike.
> ...
> Conclusion: ... Despite the intuitive sense that electric bikes would require more resources than regular bikes, life-cycle analysis shows that they actually consume 2-4 times less primary energy than human riders eating a conventional diet. This conclusion is largely due to the considerable amount of transportation and processing energy that is associated with our western food system.
People eat a lot and exercise to lose weight. They don’t eat to only replenish expended energy. They over consume then often compensate with exercise. So a particular rider might eat more or might eat the same regardless of whether they pedaled or they used electric power.
Some diets aren't as efficient as others though. Feeding corn to cows then eating the cow meat is going to be vastly less efficient than eating the corn directly for example.
I'm not sure that is significant. In most countries e-bikes are constrained not to exceed 25 km/h when under power. I've commuted by bike for some parts of my life (I now work from home) and I usually overtake e-bikes unless I'm climbing a pretty steep hill.
On the other hand your second part is probably correct: I recall reading that when Canada started mandating helmets it had a negative effect on life expectancy because people were using bikes less and that had an impact on cardiovascular health that exceeded the increase in safety. So you might be right that the increase in usage overweights the change in efficiency.
On the other hand I would never leave a bike that is worth more than 100 euros parked outdoors on a pole in most European and American cities even with a decent U-lock. Add to that weather and electrical components and you end up with something you can use only if you have an indoors parking.
And obviously, caveat lector: there are huge assumptions going on here, because the "real" cost of stuff like food and batteries aren't trivial to calculate at all. It's not like you can feed em both the same resources anyhow, so at best this is an analysis that the efficiency is sort of comparable. In 2004.
This is what I was thinking as well. My naive guess is that the extra energy expended to build an electric bike blows the efficiency improvement completely out of the water. It would take a truly enormous amount of usage to make up the difference in the expected lifetime of the battery (which then has to be efficiently recycled, else it's yet another environmental hazard).
Of course the real issue is the fact that I can't travel even 1km toward my workplace on a bike without seriously fearing for my life. Cities in the United States are extremely unfriendly to bikes.
On the other hand, from what I understand in the Netherlands, ebikes help older people keep cycling for longer so ebikes are still good?
I would guess overall, the difference between bike and ebike is a rounding error compared to not riding at all. Both environmentally, and from a health pov.
The major downsides are: weather extremes (that are going to be more common). The bike is generally heavier (much more effort to get it into the building or onto a bus).
And of course, the biggest one of them all - you are now vilified by both car drivers and pedestrians, while taking on more risk than either one. And of course suburban sprawl being the center-point of US culture, anywhere takes too damn long to get to even on an e-bike.
It's unfortunate that the US isn't more dense, which would make an ebike an ideal mode of transport in ~80% of cases.
In both cases the energy use is lower than lots of things that we don’t think of in terms of energy.
By way of comparison, a hot shower used about 300 Wh (a full charge on a smallish ebike battery) every minute.
Since the rise in popularity of electric cars 400wh/km is actually quite high.
Most electric vehicles are rated city/highway 15/20kwh/100km (150 w-h/km / 200 w-h/km)
On this page:
https://forum.abetterrouteplanner.com/blogs/entry/13-model-3...
it shows the model 3 gets 143 Wh/km at 110 km/h
Anectdote about this, is that my watt meter on my bicycle gives out the total amount of work done in kJ at the end. To convert that to kcal in food, one can convert 1-to-1, as the metabolic efficiency matches roughly the ratio between kcal and kJ.
"Save the environment, take the elevator"?
Let's assume 15 floors since otherwise you'd probably save time walking.
The article suggests a grid efficiency of 50% and a motor efficiency of electric e-bike motors as 75%. It looks like elevator motors are actually more efficient (increasingly so as more people are loaded) [4]. It's only about 5 percentage points higher, so for simplicity let's keep 75%.
Ignoring the transportation and manufacture cost of the elevator assembly (not totally unreasonable since it has a long lifetime), elevators have an energy ratio of 2.5:6.7 or 1:2.7, which looks far better than the 1:28 that the article quotes for humans.
Gee, that kind of upends my worldview... I guess I'll just wait until bodies are deprecated in favor of high-efficiency cybernetics.
[0] https://captaincalculator.com/health/calorie/calories-burned...
[1] https://www.livestrong.com/article/301539-calories-burned-cl...
[2] https://www.quora.com/How-much-electricity-does-an-elevator-...
[3] https://fatknowledge.blogspot.com/2007/02/how-much-energy-do...
[4] https://www.me.ua.edu/me416/LECTURE%20MATERIALS/MotorEffic&P...
Not many people would consider walking 15 floors either up or downstairs. Actually many people pant heavily when climbing (from their point of view) 3 floors to my place.
Personally I eat about the same whether I drive or bike, just ride to avoid getting fatter.
It's apparent when they stop doing exercise and they gain ton of weight until they adjust their diet again. Usually that requires concious effort.
My buddy seen that when he quit judo.
Electric bike has its legitimate target group - elderly or ill or handicapped people. If you're fine, get that ordinary bike and build some form.
The point of transportation is to take you places, not to make you healthy.
>increased electricity consumption
The biggest ebike battery you're likely to find is 500 Watt-hours. That's about 6¢ for the average American to fill from zero to full, and that'll carry you 50 miles.
https://tenor.com/view/walle-humans-lazy-eve-disney-gif-5471...