Experts: Electric highways that charge cars on-the-go through wireless technology will bathe passengers in cancer-causing electropollution


The United States is home to virtually as many cars as people, with its 318 million residents owning an estimated 260 million vehicles. As noted by the website Nanalyze.com, if you’re American and you don’t own a car, “people usually think you’re a hippy or an alcoholic.” Those millions and millions of vehicles represent big bucks – pots of cash that every vehicle manufacturer wants to dip into, including the manufacturers of electric vehicles.

There’s one big problem with these vehicles, though: They have to be charged every 80 to 100 miles. That fact alone means that these cars are mostly only suitable to be used as city run-around vehicles, and perhaps accounts to a large extent for the fact that less than one percent of all the vehicles in the United States are electric.

Scientists everywhere have been scrambling to find a way around this problem, especially since electric cars have been touted as being better for the environment and are becoming increasingly fashionable with celebrities like Leonardo DiCaprio. (Related: Carbon footprint lunacy – Leonardo DiCaprio flies 8,000 miles on private jet to accept environmental award.)

One solution that was recently presented by researchers from the University of Colorado Boulder is a method of “on the go” wireless charging where electric plates are installed along highways and other roads to charge vehicles automatically as they pass along.

While this might seem like a practical and sensible solution, experts warn that this type of “effortless” charging might pose serious health risks.

Why electric highways are a bad idea

NaturalHealth365 explains that the method developed by the University of Colorado Boulder’s Department of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering involves the wireless transfer of power using very high frequencies of around 1,000 watts (in megahertz-scale frequencies) to provide energy to vehicles traveling along special “electric highways” embedded with charging plates. Since vehicles would move along these highways at high speed, these special charging plates would have to be embedded at regular intervals, probably every few meters, in specially designated charging lanes.

The small amount of space between plates means that the frequency of the electric field would have to be high – and that’s where the potential for disaster lies.

To illustrate just how high these frequencies would have to be, one only needs to compare the charging needs of household items like smartphones (5 watts of power) or laptops (100 watts) to the massively high frequencies needed to fuel the charging plates.

As reported by NaturalHealth365, all wireless devices emit a type of electromagnetic field (EMF) known as radio frequency radiation. This type of radiation has been clearly linked to multiple types of cancer, including cancer of the brain, breast, prostate, liver, skin and lungs, as well as attention deficit disorder (ADD), multiple sclerosis, migraines, obesity, fertility problems and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Studies have also found that just 35 minutes spent on a cellphone is enough to affect the user’s heart and blood pressure rates, and that even 2G radiation causes DNA damage and brain cancer in rats.

What about people who are electrosensitive?

NaturalHealth365 highlights another problem linked to the use of electric highways:

Electromagnetic hypersensitivity, or electrosensitivity, is a recognized disorder, with the World Health Organization acknowledging that 3.5 percent to 5 percent of the population suffers from the syndrome when in proximity to wireless or electrical technologies such as smart meters, cell phones, laptop computers or power lines.

Symptoms – which include headache, nausea, dizziness, fatigue, difficulty concentrating, depression and sleep disorders – can take three to five years to develop.

The suffering of these individuals will increase exponentially if electric highways become an everyday reality in the future.

Read more about the future of cars and transportation at Robocars.news.

Sources include:

NaturalHealth365.com

Nanalyze.com



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