- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
During 2013–2017, casualty rates per 100 million miles were 5.16 (95% CI 4.92 to 5.42) for E- HE vehicles and 2.40 (95%CI 2.38 to 2.41) for ICE vehicles, indicating that collisions were twice as likely (RR 2.15; 95% CI 2.05 to 2.26) with E-HE vehicles. Poisson regression found no evidence that E-HE vehicles were more dangerous in rural environments (RR 0.91; 95% CI 0.74 to 1.11); but strong evidence that E-HE vehicles were three times more dangerous than ICE vehicles in urban environments (RR 2.97; 95% CI 2.41 to 3.7). Sensitivity analyses of missing data support main findings.
I don’t understand this statement. More pedestrians are injured by gas cars but electric cars are more dangerous?
This makes some sense. My car is just a hybrid but plenty of times I’ve had people just slowly walking in front of me in a parking lot. They can’t easily hear my car at that lower speed as far as I can tell. And full electric would be even quieter.
It’s interesting though. No easy solution is immediately coming to me, other than pedestrians getting more and more used to cars not making any sound.
More pedestrians are injured by gas and diesel cars because most cars in the UK are gas or diesel.
The UK has less EVs, but they injure pedestrians at a higher rate than gas cars.
*fewer EVs.
You can’t drive half a car :)
Motorcycles would like a word.
Try reading a dictionary from this century.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
half a car
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
But can I get a licence for my pet bee? Eric the half a bee.
https://youtu.be/mQauncy81DI?si=ys4KF8PyfCb03XE0
If I understand it correctly, the reason is because there are more ICE cars than EVs and H-EVs. In absolute numbers, this makes it so that ICE vehicles collide with the most pedestrians, but, per vehicle, EVs and H-EVs collide with the most pedestrians.
I’ve heard some newer EVs and H-EVs emit sounds (usually some sort of whirring sound) to alert pedestrians. Keep in mind that the data in this study was from 2013-2017. There have been some innovations made to mitigate this issue since then.
We have “whistlers” to supposedly give the deer/other animals warning a vehicle is approaching, maybe add a speaker system that just makes ICE sounds
Ideally we would be able to keep the benefit of quieter streets and parking lots though. Maybe there’s no getting around it