Battery-electric cars almost always emit far less total CO₂-equivalent (CO₂e) over their life than comparable gasoline cars. While EVs have higher manufacturing emissions (mainly from the large battery), these are quickly offset by their clean use-phase.
A mid-size EV on today’s average US/EU grid emits roughly 40–70 gCO₂e/km (including battery and power generation), versus ~180–200 gCO₂e/km for a similar gasoline car (tailpipe+fuel production).
In coal-heavy grids (e.g. Poland or India, ~600–700 gCO₂/kWh), EVs reach parity with a small gasoline car only in the first few tens of thousands of kilometres. In low-carbon contexts (Norway ~20 g/kWh), EV use-phase emissions drop to only a few g/km, so almost all EV life-cycle emissions come from manufacturing. Over a typical 150,000–200,000 km lifetime, total emissions for a mid-size EV range ~15–30 tCO₂e (with one battery replacement) versus ~35–45 tCO₂e for the gasoline car.
Thus, even a “dirty” EV emits substantially less than a gasoline car on net. Key uncertainties include battery carbon intensity (30–100 kgCO₂e/kWh) and future grid decarbonization. But today’s data (multiple peer-reviewed LCAs and official sources) show the “spew as much” claim is false: EVs have no tailpipe and significantly lower lifecycle CO₂e.
As grids green, EV benefits grow.
Life-Cycle Emissions Overview
Electric vehicles have zero tailpipe CO₂, but their life-cycle emissions include (1) material extraction and manufacturing (notably the battery), (2) fuel production (well-to-tank), and (3) vehicle operation. Figure 1 (below) outlines a typical EV vs ICE life cycle. In nearly all scenarios, the sum of these is lower for EVs. Even if charged on a dirtier grid, EVs tend to produce less greenhouse gas per km over their lifetime. The only exception is extremely coal-intensive grids today, where a very efficient hybrid or small ICE might temporarily match a large EV’s life-cycle footprint. But as power systems decarbonise, EVs’ advantages only widen.





