Thursday 20 July 2017

Electric Cars: The Future of Driving



Cars have come a long way from their initial designs, capability and utilities. The development of internal combustion engines in the 18th century preceded the production of the first car credited to Karl Benz in 1886. These pioneer vehicles which had pretty simplistic designs were concerned more with functionality and durability.
1938 Horch Cabriolet

Over the years these cars (ICE's) which have become a very popular means of transportation throughout the world have improved significantly offering owners additional features for luxury and comfort such as air conditioners, rear parking cameras, GPS..etc just to name a few. However, the evolution of cars has moved a step further with the advent of electric vehicles (EV's), and more than ever since the inception of the idea for electric powered vehicles, it is seen now as a viable and possible alternative to the present vehicles which run on fossil fuel.

These EV's do not have engines but are powered by front and rear motors which do not run on fuel or diesel but on electricity which is stored in batteries, enabling the cars to be charged like a mobile phone right in your homes. 
Tesla Model S
The EV,s come with all the luxury that cars could possibly have in this age. (Check out the features of Tesla Model S) Car manufacturers who produce vehicles with ICE's such as GM, Toyota, Chevrolet,etc. are also in the race for electric vehicles and this could partly be because of the effect of global warming in different parts of world which results in the melting ice caps, heat waves, tsunamis and other catastrophic events. These events have had an adverse effect on plant and animal life on our planet.In view of these issues, a number of countries especially in Europe have adopted environmental laws and even implemented taxes which is aimed at reducing the amount of carbon emissions, charging person's with vehicles with a higher CO2 emission a higher rate of tax.
Tesla Model X
So, producing cars which are not powered by fossil fuel has become a priority for a number of car manufacturers, and in the lead (taking publicity into consideration ) of this revolution is TESLA who has invested a lot in perfecting the electric vehicle technology.The question here however is, what does this technology portend for Nigeria? Where Giant industry's like Tesla are investing in technologies that would render crude oil potentially unimportant.Though the need for energy worldwide is enormous, but other alternative sources are becoming more viable and so Nigeria may likely be in a crisis in the near future if the country does not break its over dependence on oil and start improving other sectors of the economy which can generate revenue for the country.
According to the freedom fuel foundation countries like Norway and Netherlands have a target, that by 2025 they would stop the sale of fuel or diesel powered vehicles and replace them with electric vehicles (EV). Germany and India have similar plans but place their targets at 2030. Most likely others countries would follow suite and soon the global demand for crude oil will drop.So!! what happens when the investments made globally towards alternative energy source starts yielding positive fruits? How would a Nigerian government who is reluctant to cut down it's expenses fund it's activities? Would the tax burden on the citizens then be increased? Food for thought people.











Wednesday 5 July 2017

The Police : Crisis in Ikorodu




The duty of protecting the lives and property of citizens in usually the responsibility of the police anywhere in the world. However the recent events playing out in the Ikorodu axis of Lagos state has citizens of the state and the country at large asking the question - how well are the police handling these responsibilities?

The horrible crimes committed by the notorious group called "Badoo" should be handled in a more professional manner by the police.In every society, there are peaceful and law abiding citizens and among them there would be people who engage in criminal activities. A professional police department should be aware of this fact and therefore carryout proper and in depth investigations and root out the perpetrators of these heinous crimes without injury to it's law abiding citizens. However the system adopted by the police as a solution to this problem was to cast a large drag net, by making random and indiscriminate arrests of citizens who were not members of the dreaded cult.

 About a 100 persons or more were arrested by the police who had no tangible evidence linking a number of the persons who they termed as "suspects" to the crimes committed by the dreaded cult. Most of these unlucky civilians had their photos taken and pasted on the pages of some Nigerian dailies regardless of the fact that they were yet to be adjudged guilty by a competent court.   It was a typical tactic of "arrest first and get evidence later". Mr. Okewunmi Omotoyosi Daniel was among the unfortunate persons who were bundled into a police vehicle and detained without prior evidence linking him to any wrong doing. In a country were there is sanity and equity, such a person who has been traumatized by this incidence ought to be appropriately compensated, but can we expect that?

A more significant presence of the police in the Ikorodu area would most likely have curtailed this problem and the resulting backlash of the community who had begun taking the laws into their own hands by killing persons they suspected to be members of the group.
As citizens of Nigeria, are we not entitled to better? Should we not have a police force who should actually protect us rather than subject us to unlawful imprisonment?