Long Way Up
Long Way Up is a documentary television series that follows actors Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman as they undertake a 13,000-mile motorcycle journey in 2019 from Ushuaia, Argentina—the southernmost city in the world—to Los Angeles, California, riding prototype electric Harley-Davidson LiveWire motorcycles through South and Central America.[1][2] The ten-episode series, executive produced by McGregor and Boorman, premiered on Apple TV+ on September 18, 2020, and chronicles the logistical challenges of electric vehicle travel in regions with limited charging infrastructure, including frequent delays, mechanical issues, and reliance on a support team equipped with prototype Rivian R1T electric trucks.[3][4] The expedition, the third in the duo's "Long Way" adventure franchise after Long Way Round (2004) and Long Way Down (2007), aimed to demonstrate the viability of electric motorcycles for long-distance overland travel while highlighting environmental concerns and cultural encounters along routes encompassing diverse terrains from Patagonian gravel roads to Andean passes and Central American highways.[5] Despite promotional emphasis on sustainability, the production faced criticism for its carbon footprint, as the team reportedly used diesel generators for charging in remote areas and air freighted vehicles and parts when road travel proved infeasible, underscoring the practical limitations of battery-electric technology for such expeditions at the time.[6] The series received praise for its raw depiction of friendship, resilience, and technical hurdles but drew scrutiny from adventure motorcycling communities for glossing over the extensive logistical support that enabled completion, including pre-scouting and non-electric backups.[4]Background and Production
Development and Announcement
In 2019, actors Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman announced "Long Way Up" as the third installment in their motorcycle adventure documentary series, following "Long Way Round" in 2004 and "Long Way Down" in 2007, with plans to traverse approximately 13,000 miles northward from Ushuaia, Argentina, to Los Angeles, California, exclusively on electric motorcycles.[7] The project emphasized adventure travel while highlighting the potential of battery-electric vehicles for extended journeys in remote regions, amid growing interest in sustainable mobility.[8] Harley-Davidson entered a partnership to supply and customize prototype LiveWire electric motorcycles, adapting them for greater range and off-road resilience to test electric propulsion in diverse South and Central American terrains.[9] Pre-filming preparations included evaluations of electric vehicle charging infrastructure along the proposed route, given the scarcity of such facilities in rural and mountainous areas of Argentina, Chile, and beyond.[10] Apple TV+ was secured as the production and streaming partner, aligning the series with platforms investing in original unscripted content focused on innovation and exploration.[11]Filming Timeline and Delays
The principal filming for Long Way Up commenced on September 19, 2019, in Ushuaia, Argentina, with Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman departing on Harley-Davidson LiveWire motorcycles as part of a continuous three-month expedition northward.[12] The production spanned approximately 13,000 miles across 13 countries and 16 border crossings, involving a support team with electric Rivian vehicles for logistics and charging infrastructure challenges that intermittently slowed progress.[13] [2] Filming concluded in mid-December 2019 upon reaching Los Angeles, California, ahead of the global COVID-19 pandemic's major disruptions, which began affecting international travel and production schedules in early 2020.[14] Although the on-location shoot avoided direct pandemic interruptions, post-production occurred amid lockdowns and supply chain issues, influencing the final edit's emphasis on unpolished, real-time footage to capture the journey's raw logistical hurdles rather than a seamless narrative.[15] The series premiered on Apple TV+ on September 18, 2020, with the first three episodes released simultaneously, followed by weekly installments for the remaining seven, totaling a 10-episode format that prioritized authenticity over extensive re-shoots unavailable due to ongoing border restrictions.[11] This timeline reflected a year-long gap from filming wrap to debut, attributable in part to the need for extensive charging and technical data integration from the electric vehicles, compounded by pandemic-related delays in collaborative editing across international teams.[2]Production Team and Budget Considerations
The production of Long Way Up was directed by David Alexanian and Russ Malkin, both of whom served as executive producers alongside Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman, emphasizing a documentary approach that captured unscripted interactions and real-time decision-making during the journey rather than manufactured drama.[11][16] Additional key crew included producers Lucy Trujillo and line producer Marie-Louise Frellesen, with directors of photography Claudio von Planta and James Simak handling cinematography to maintain visual authenticity in remote terrains.[17] This team structure, built on prior collaborations from the Long Way series, prioritized logistical improvisation over polished narratives, reflecting causal constraints of filming in underdeveloped regions with limited infrastructure.[18] The decision to center the series on electric vehicles stemmed from partnerships with Harley-Davidson for prototype LiveWire motorcycles and Rivian for support logistics, positioning the production as a promotional showcase for emerging EV technologies amid sparse charging networks in South America.[19] These ties influenced on-the-ground adaptations, such as Rivian's development of custom Level 2 charging stations installed along the route, which addressed the absence of public infrastructure and enabled the all-electric convoy to proceed without fossil fuel reliance for propulsion.[20] Such innovations, while advancing the series' theme of sustainable adventure, underscored production choices driven by sponsor capabilities rather than purely organic exploration. Economic considerations manifested in the scale of the support fleet, comprising multiple Rivian R1T electric pickup prototypes that transported crew, equipment, and charging gear over 13,000 miles, contrasting claims of a lightweight environmental footprint with the resource-intensive reality of maintaining an all-EV operation in areas lacking grid support. This setup, involving pre-positioned chargers and vehicle-to-vehicle power transfer, highlighted how production feasibility hinged on corporate-backed infrastructure investments, revealing the causal trade-offs between EV advocacy and the embedded logistics of a large-scale film crew.[12][21]Participants and Equipment
Principal Riders: Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman
Ewan McGregor, born March 31, 1971, is a Scottish actor renowned for portraying Obi-Wan Kenobi in the *Star Wars* prequel trilogy (1999–2005). His collaboration with Charley Boorman originated in their shared enthusiasm for motorcycle travel, culminating in the 2004 documentary Long Way Round, a 19,000-mile journey from London to New York via Europe and Asia.[22] This was followed by Long Way Down in 2007, an approximately 15,000-mile expedition from John o' Groats, Scotland, to Cape Town, South Africa, traversing Europe and Africa.[23] These ventures established their pattern of leveraging personal friendship and adventure-seeking to document overland motorcycle challenges, emphasizing endurance and camaraderie over competitive racing.[24] Charley Boorman, born August 23, 1966, is an English actor, travel writer, and presenter, the son of filmmaker John Boorman, with early roles in films like Deliverance (1972).[25] An avid motorcyclist since age seven, Boorman's background in off-road riding and family influences fostered his commitment to exploratory trips.[26] His partnership with McGregor, bonded through mutual interests in two-wheeled travel rather than professional overlap, served as the primary impetus for the Long Way series, transforming their hobby into televised narratives of logistical and physical trials.[27] The 2019 Long Way Up marked their reunion after a 12-year hiatus, prompted by Boorman's 2016 motorcycle accident that required multiple surgeries and prompted reflection on life's priorities.[28] Preparations focused on physical conditioning and adaptation to electric propulsion, echoing fitness regimens from prior trips that included strength training and survival drills to mitigate fatigue on extended rides.[29] McGregor voiced early reservations about electric motorcycles' limited range for remote terrains, highlighting a pragmatic assessment of technology's constraints against their history of combustion-engine reliability.[30] Their enduring friendship, tested yet reinforced by past adversities like border delays and mechanical failures, underscored the causal role of personal bonds in sustaining these high-stakes endeavors.[31]Harley-Davidson LiveWire Electric Motorcycles
The principal motorcycles employed in Long Way Up consisted of two customized 2019 Harley-Davidson LiveWire electric models, each equipped with a Revelation electric drivetrain producing 105 horsepower (78 kW) and 86 lb-ft (116 Nm) of torque.[32][33] The bikes offered an EPA-rated range of up to 146 miles in city riding under optimal conditions, reflecting the energy density constraints of contemporary lithium-ion battery packs.[33] Harley-Davidson selected these models to showcase electric propulsion's potential for extended travel, partnering with the production to promote broader adoption of battery-electric motorcycles amid evolving market demands for sustainable transport.[34] To adapt the street-oriented LiveWires for adventure touring, engineers implemented modifications such as an additional two inches of ground clearance, 1.5 inches more rear suspension travel, reinforced crash protection, and integrated luggage systems, incorporating prototype components from the forthcoming Pan America adventure platform.[35][36] These enhancements addressed the base model's limitations in off-road capability and load-carrying, yet the core electric powertrain retained inherent vulnerabilities tied to 2019-era battery technology.[35] The 15.5 kWh lithium-ion battery pack necessitated charging times of approximately 3-5 hours for a full recharge via Level 2 AC stations, far exceeding the rapid refueling of internal combustion counterparts and underscoring the thermodynamic and infrastructural challenges of electrochemical energy storage.[37] In cold climates like those encountered in Patagonia, battery efficiency diminishes due to slowed ion mobility and heightened internal resistance, potentially halving usable range compared to temperate operations—a limitation rooted in the chemical kinetics of lithium-ion cells prevalent in 2019 EVs.[38] High-altitude starts further compounded these issues through reduced atmospheric pressure affecting thermal management, though primary constraints stemmed from temperature sensitivity rather than elevation alone.[39]Support Vehicles and Logistics
The journey relied on a fleet of support vehicles to manage the limitations of the electric Harley-Davidson LiveWire motorcycles, which had an approximate range of 146 miles per charge.[40] Two prototype Rivian R1T electric pickup trucks served as primary support, traveling ahead of the riders to establish temporary Level 2 charging stations along the route from Ushuaia, Argentina, to Los Angeles, California.[40][41] These trucks, equipped with a 400-mile range, transported charging equipment and spare batteries, enabling the motorcycles to recharge while minimizing downtime in areas lacking public infrastructure.[40] In regions with sparse or unreliable electricity, diesel-powered backups were essential for operational continuity. A diesel generator truck accompanied the convoy to power charging for both the motorcycles and Rivian trucks when grid access failed, as seen early in the trip within the first 300 miles.[42] Additional support included a diesel Mercedes-Benz Sprinter van for equipment transport and logistics, alongside industrial diesel generators to address power shortages in remote South American terrains.[43] These fossil fuel-dependent assets ensured reliability but highlighted the infrastructure gaps that pure electric travel could not independently overcome.[12] A dedicated support team of approximately 20 personnel managed the convoy's operations, including mechanics for frequent tire replacements due to rough gravel roads, battery swaps, and vehicle maintenance.[44] Medics provided on-site medical support for potential injuries from off-road conditions, while filmmakers and logistics coordinators handled filming equipment, permits, and complex border crossings across 19 countries.[44] This team structure, including extra motorcycles for rider swaps during charging, facilitated the 13,000-mile expedition but underscored the heavy logistical footprint required beyond the principal riders' two bikes.[44][45]Journey Overview
Route from Ushuaia to Los Angeles
The journey commenced on September 19, 2019, in Ushuaia, Argentina, recognized as the world's southernmost city, and spanned approximately 13,000 miles (21,000 km) northward to Los Angeles, California, concluding on December 15, 2019, over roughly 100 days of travel including riding and logistics.[14][46] The route traversed 13 countries—Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, Mexico, and the United States—involving 16 border crossings that introduced infrastructural hurdles such as protracted customs inspections and visa processing delays, particularly at remote Andean and Central American frontiers where documentation for specialized electric vehicles required additional scrutiny.[46][47] These logistics compounded the challenges of navigating inconsistent road quality, from paved highways to extensive gravel and dirt sections prone to erosion and flooding.[12] Initial segments through Argentine and Chilean Patagonia featured rugged coastal routes and ferry crossings amid fjords, with terrains dominated by gravel-packed roads like Argentina's Ruta Nacional 40 and Chile's Carretera Austral, where loose surfaces and variable weather, including high winds and occasional snow, tested vehicle stability and required cautious pacing to avoid isolation in sparsely populated areas lacking reliable maintenance facilities.[47] Progressing into the Andes, the path ascended to elevations exceeding 15,000 feet (4,600 meters) via high mountain passes, such as those near the Argentina-Chile border, where thin air reduced oxygen availability and steep gradients strained momentum on unpaved tracks, while remote valleys offered minimal roadside support infrastructure.[12] Further north, the itinerary crossed Chile's Atacama Desert, one of the driest regions on Earth, characterized by vast expanses of barren gravel and sand with scant electrical grid access in off-highway detours, necessitating meticulous route planning to align with sparse charging points amid extreme aridity and temperature fluctuations.[47] Entering Bolivia, the route traversed the high Altiplano plateau, including the Uyuni Salt Flats at around 12,000 feet (3,700 meters), where mirror-like surfaces after rain created disorienting visibility issues on salt-crusted tracks, followed by ascents to La Paz, navigating switchbacks and potholed roads amid altitude-induced fatigue risks.[12] In Peru and Ecuador, Andean cordilleras continued with serpentine highways and river valleys, incorporating segments of poor paving and landslide-prone slopes, before descending to coastal lowlands. Colombia's diverse topography included forested highlands and coffee regions with muddy backroads during wet seasons. Central America's narrower isthmus presented denser jungle fringes, frequent border checkpoints, and deteriorated pavements exacerbated by tropical rains, culminating in Mexico's varied landscapes from Sierra Madre passes to Baja California deserts en route to the U.S. border.[47] Throughout, the path emphasized longitudinal progression while skirting major urban congestion, prioritizing scenic but demanding byways that highlighted infrastructural disparities, such as Bolivia's altiplano's rudimentary electrification versus Mexico's more developed northern highways.[46]Key Challenges and Milestones
The Long Way Up expedition achieved the milestone of completing the longest recorded journey on electric motorcycles to date, spanning approximately 13,000 miles (21,000 km) from Ushuaia, Argentina, to Los Angeles, California, across 13 countries and 16 border crossings.[48][14] This route traversed diverse biomes, from the subantarctic tundra of Tierra del Fuego to Andean highlands and coastal deserts, highlighting the potential for electric vehicles in remote, varied environments over a 100-day period from September 5 to December 14, 2019.[49][14] A pivotal achievement was arriving in Los Angeles on schedule despite prototype equipment limitations, which underscored adaptations like custom range-extending modifications borrowed from Harley-Davidson's Pan America lineup and reliance on electric support vehicles for logistics.[50] The effort inspired heightened interest in electric motorcycle viability for long-distance adventure travel, as evidenced by subsequent media coverage and discussions on EV infrastructure expansion in Latin America.[51] Primary challenges encompassed electric range constraints exacerbated by cold Patagonian weather and high altitudes, which curtailed daily progress to 120-180 miles on average through South and Central America, far below optimal conditions.[44] Inadequate native charging infrastructure prompted the pre-deployment of a custom grid by an energy partner, involving hunts for compatible outlets and extended downtime for recharges in remote areas.[52] Mechanical failures, including at least one full battery pack replacement and handling of crash damage from rider falls, compounded delays and required on-site repairs, testing supply chains for specialized parts across borders.[53] These issues, alongside equipment unreliability, elevated team stress, manifesting in documented interpersonal strains during the compressed timeline.[52]Episode Guide
Episodes 1-4: Southern South America
Episodes 1 through 4 of Long Way Up chronicle the preparatory stages and the initial leg of the journey through southern South America, commencing at Ushuaia, Argentina, and navigating the challenging terrains of Patagonia and the Andes. These installments highlight the logistical hurdles of electric motorcycle travel in remote areas with limited charging infrastructure, including cold weather impacts on battery performance and ad hoc charging solutions. The narrative balances the riders' enthusiasm for sustainable adventure with practical setbacks, such as extended charging times and range reductions.[28] In Episode 1, titled "Preparation," Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman reunite to assess life priorities after personal health scares and plan the 13,000-mile electric odyssey. The focus centers on selecting prototype Harley-Davidson LiveWire motorcycles and electric support vehicles, while grappling with charging logistics across regions lacking grid access. The team assembles the bikes in Argentina, underscoring the experimental nature of the endeavor amid time constraints for shipping and testing.[54][55] Episode 2, "Ushuaia," marks the official departure from the southernmost city on the planet, but unseasonably severe winter conditions— the worst since 1994—introduce immediate complications. Snow and sub-zero temperatures diminish battery range significantly, stranding the riders early when vehicles fail to reach planned distances. Tensions rise from mechanical glitches and weather-induced delays, with the team improvising to complete short initial rides to symbolic sites like the Pinguino Rey penguin reserve. This episode exposes the vulnerabilities of electric propulsion in extreme cold, where battery efficiency drops due to thermal limitations.[56][47][57] Episodes 3 and 4 shift northward into Southern Patagonia and the Andes, featuring grueling gravel roads along routes like Argentina's RN40 and encounters with natural wonders such as glaciers and peaks. In "Southern Patagonia," the group charges at remote eco-lodges using sustainable hydroelectric power, though slow Level 2 charging extends downtime to hours for partial recharges. Cultural interactions include visits to indigenous communities and historical sites, providing respite amid terrain that tests the LiveWires' torque but amplifies range anxiety on unpaved paths. "The Andes" escalates with high-altitude climbs demanding precise energy management, where riders resort to generator-assisted charging and vehicle-to-vehicle power sharing to meet daily mileage goals of around 65-100 miles. These segments reveal early patterns of reliance on support logistics rather than autonomous riding, with Patagonia’s sparse outlets—often private homes or camps—necessitating creative adaptations.[58][44][59] Throughout these episodes, the riders' optimism for electric innovation contrasts with empirical constraints, including cold-weather range losses of up to 50% below specifications and charging sessions lasting 4-8 hours for incomplete fills, as corroborated by on-trip experiences in subfreezing conditions. No major cultural or political impositions alter the route, though local hospitality aids progress in infrastructure deserts.[44][47]Episodes 5-8: Northern South America
Episodes 5 and 6 depict the riders' passage through the Atacama Desert in Chile and into Bolivia's high-altitude altiplano, where thin air contributes to human and mechanical strains. A production team member suffers severe altitude sickness amid the red rock landscapes and sparse oxygen at elevations exceeding 4,000 meters, requiring medical intervention and delaying progress.[60][61] The electric motorcycles experience reduced efficacy in these conditions, with thinner atmosphere impairing regenerative braking and battery cooling efficiency, leading to frequent towing by support vehicles across rugged terrain.[62] Border delays at the Chile-Bolivia crossing further compound logistical hurdles, as customs officials scrutinize the unconventional electric convoy.[60] In Bolivia, the journey intensifies through the vast Salar de Uyuni salt flats and surrounding desert, where the team lodges in a hotel constructed entirely from salt blocks.[63] Vehicle breakdowns persist, necessitating repeated mechanical interventions and underscoring the limitations of electric propulsion in remote, high-elevation environments lacking charging infrastructure.[62] The riders push toward La Paz, Bolivia's capital at 3,640 meters, navigating flooded roads and evading stray animals at night, which heighten risks to the convoy.[64] By this stage, cumulative mileage approaches 5,000 miles, amplifying wear on components and testing the riders' endurance amid persistent repairs.[46] Episode 7 shifts to Peru, marking the approximate halfway point of the 13,000-mile odyssey, with McGregor fulfilling a lifelong ambition by ascending to Machu Picchu via the Inca Trail.[65] Recovering from personal health setbacks incurred in Bolivia, the duo crosses into Peru and ventures deeper into Amazonian fringes, visiting indigenous Ashaninka communities near Ayacucho to observe local customs and environmental contrasts.[66][67] Cultural immersion highlights divergences from prior stops, yet ongoing motorcycle servicing interrupts the pace, revealing how terrain-induced battery drain and charging dependencies temper initial optimism about electric viability for long-haul adventure travel.[68] Episode 8 covers Ecuador, where the group savors coastal and highland scenery en route to Guayaquil, but confronts escalating fatigue after weeks of compounded delays.[69][70] Logistical splits emerge, with support trucks ferrying via Esmeraldas Port to bypass the Darién Gap, while riders press northward amid treacherous rainy-night drives and additional vehicle malfunctions.[71] Interpersonal dynamics strain under the cumulative toll, as McGregor and Boorman's longstanding camaraderie faces scrutiny from unrelenting mechanical realities, prompting candid reflections on the expedition's feasibility with nascent electric technology.[72] These segments illustrate a pivot from exploratory zeal to pragmatic adaptation, with empirical breakdowns—such as towing frequency and altitude-diminished range—challenging promotional narratives of seamless sustainability.[73]Episodes 9-11: Central America and Northward
Episodes 9 and 10 document McGregor and Boorman's progression through Central America and Mexico, navigating the logistical hurdle of the Darién Gap via a coastal trawler journey from Colombia, followed by rides across Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, and into Mexico toward Los Angeles.[74][75] The segments emphasize persistent mechanical unreliability of the Harley-Davidson LiveWire motorcycles, including final significant breakdowns amid humid jungles and poor roads, necessitating repeated interventions from the support crew's diesel-powered trucks and generators for repairs and charging.[76][77] In episode 9, titled "Colombia, Panama & Costa Rica," the riders board an aging trawler delayed by fog for a multi-day voyage along Colombia's coast to bypass the impassable Darién Gap, arriving in Panama on approximately June 20, 2019.[74] They then motor north through Panama's rainforests and the Panama Canal vicinity, encountering charging scarcity that required creative adaptations like hotel outlets and portable generators, before entering Costa Rica's coastal routes with bouts of rain and minor electrical faults.[74] The episode highlights the physical strain from heat and humidity, with Boorman noting dehydration risks, while the crew manages a LiveWire battery failure en route, underscoring the bikes' vulnerability outside urban areas. Episode 10, "Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala & Mexico," covers the northward ascent beginning in Costa Rica's Guanacaste region, crossing into Nicaragua where the duo approaches the active Masaya volcano crater on July 1, 2019, amid sulfurous fumes and seismic activity warnings.[75] In Honduras, they visit Choloma—a former high-crime zone—for a UNICEF school project handover, reflecting on local poverty and gang violence reductions from 2013 peaks of over 90 homicides per 100,000 residents.[78] Further north in Guatemala and Mexico, security escalates with armed escorts through cartel-influenced zones, including a detour in Oaxaca where support vehicles acquire a local bus for spare parts storage and transport during a major suspension breakdown on McGregor's bike.[77] Charging improves marginally via grid connections in Mexican towns, but reliance on the 40-vehicle convoy persists for towing and power, as evidenced by footage of bikes trailered over 200 miles of rugged terrain.[79] The finale in Los Angeles on July 30, 2019, after roughly 13,000 miles and 100 days, features a triumphant entry marked by media coverage and family reunions, with McGregor and Boorman reflecting on the journey's toll: chronic fatigue, multiple infections, and the electric bikes' 50-70% uptime due to 18 documented failures.[12][80] They visit a cactus forest and partake in a sunrise hot-air balloon ride en route, but candid admissions reveal the expedition's dependence on fossil-fuel backups contradicted initial sustainability claims, as the support fleet's diesel consumption exceeded the motorcycles' energy efficiency gains.[80][81]Technical and Sustainability Analysis
Electric Motorcycle Performance Issues
The Harley-Davidson LiveWire motorcycles used in Long Way Up, modified for adventure riding with added luggage and off-road capabilities, experienced significantly reduced range compared to factory specifications due to payload, terrain, and riding conditions. While the standard LiveWire is rated for up to 146 miles in city conditions, real-world highway and mixed-use performance often fell to around 70-95 miles, further diminished in the series by the demands of long-distance travel across varied South American landscapes.[82][83] Range anxiety was a persistent challenge, as evidenced by Ewan McGregor's admission of running out of battery power "a couple of times" during filming, necessitating reliance on support vehicles for tows or supplemental charging. Charley Boorman similarly highlighted frequent concerns over depleting charge, with the riders often pushing the limits of daily distances to reach charging points. These incidents underscored the technology's limitations for extended adventure travel without extensive logistical support.[84][30] Charging infrastructure proved unreliable in remote areas, with incompatible outlets and sparse availability forcing extended stops and creative solutions like generator-assisted recharges. Cold weather in southern Patagonia exacerbated efficiency losses, with electric vehicle batteries typically experiencing up to 40% reduced range in sub-freezing conditions due to slowed chemical reactions, a factor confirmed by the series' early episodes where performance noticeably declined.[30][85] In contrast to gasoline motorcycles, which allow refueling in minutes, the electric setup contributed to substantial downtime—often hours per charge—potentially avoiding 70-80% of such delays with internal combustion equivalents, based on comparative rider experiences and the series' documented halts. This highlighted the LiveWire's nascent readiness for unassisted long-haul expeditions, reliant on a convoy of electric support trucks that themselves faced similar power constraints.[86][87]Environmental Impact: Claims and Empirical Realities
The Long Way Up series positioned the journey as an environmentally sustainable endeavor, emphasizing the use of electric Harley-Davidson LiveWire motorcycles to demonstrate reduced fossil fuel dependency and promote electric adventure travel.[88] Producers highlighted the zero tailpipe emissions of the bikes as a key benefit, framing the expedition as a model for low-impact mobility in remote areas.[89] This narrative aligned with broader advocacy for electric vehicles (EVs) as inherently greener alternatives, with the production certified for sustainability efforts by The Planet Mark.[90] However, the environmental claims overlook lifecycle emissions, particularly from battery production reliant on lithium extraction in the Lithium Triangle encompassing Argentina and Chile—regions traversed early in the route. Lithium mining there involves evaporating vast brine volumes, depleting scarce groundwater; in Chile's Salar de Atacama, operations have reduced water levels by up to 30%, harming ecosystems and local communities dependent on aquifers.[91] In Argentina, similar processes have dried rivers and contaminated soil with chemicals, exacerbating biodiversity loss in arid salt flats critical for species like flamingos.[92] These upfront impacts, including energy-intensive processing, contribute substantially to EV batteries' carbon footprint, often 2-5 times higher than for internal combustion engine (ICE) equivalents at manufacturing.[93] Charging the motorcycles and support vehicles further complicates the sustainability profile, as South American grids during the 2019 journey derived significant power from fossils. In Latin America, natural gas and coal accounted for approximately 49% of electricity generation around 2020-2021, with renewables at 34% dominated by hydropower vulnerable to droughts.[94] This grid dependency means operational emissions for EVs in the region approach or exceed those of efficient ICE motorcycles on a per-kilometer basis, especially given the LiveWires' lower efficiency (around 77% energy-to-wheel conversion but offset by transmission losses and fossil inputs).[95] The expedition's logistics amplified emissions through a fleet of Rivian R1T electric trucks used for towing, charging, and crew support, which themselves required frequent recharges—often via towed vehicle-to-vehicle transfer but ultimately from grid or auxiliary sources in infrastructure-scarce areas.[96] While Rivians reduced some direct fossil use, the total convoy footprint, including diesel-equipped backups implied for remote reliability, likely rivaled or surpassed that of a gas-powered motorcycle convoy, as support vehicles multiplied energy demands without proportional efficiency gains.[97] Lifecycle assessments underscore these realities: while EVs like electric motorcycles can achieve 20-80% lower greenhouse gas emissions than ICE counterparts over full use when powered by clean grids, dirty grids and mining-intensive batteries erode advantages, yielding net reductions as low as 30% or less in fossil-heavy contexts.[93] Proponents argue such journeys accelerate EV innovation and grid decarbonization, yet critics, drawing on causal emissions tracing, contend the promotion glosses over rare earth dependencies, supply chain harms, and the absence of true net-zero without systemic renewable overhauls—rendering tailpipe-focused claims incomplete.[98] No verified data confirms the Long Way Up trip's total carbon as lower than an equivalent ICE journey, highlighting the gap between promotional rhetoric and empirical full-cycle accounting.[99]Logistical Dependencies and Support Infrastructure
The journey relied heavily on a bespoke charging infrastructure established by Rivian, which installed over 150 Level 2 charging stations along the 13,000-mile route to mitigate the limited range of the electric Harley-Davidson LiveWire motorcycles, averaging only 120-180 miles per day in South and Central America due to frequent recharges.[100][44] These stations, often requiring overnight charging at 110V or Level 2 speeds, underscored the insufficiency of the motorcycles' native range for unassisted long-haul travel in regions lacking widespread EV infrastructure.[44] Support operations included diesel-powered vehicles and portable generators transported in accompanying trucks, which provided backup power when grid electricity failed or solar alternatives proved inadequate, as seen in instances where solar panels on support vehicles could not sustain charging demands.[101] Generators, often running on fossil fuels, were used overnight by off-grid locals and the team alike, revealing a causal dependence on conventional energy sources to bridge gaps in renewable charging viability.[102] Extra motorcycles per rider allowed continued progress while others charged, further highlighting logistical crutches beyond pure electric propulsion.[44] Terrain and border challenges necessitated non-riding adaptations, including ferries across gaps in Patagonia like the Gulf of Corcovado and the Darién Gap between Colombia and Panama, where motorcycles were shipped via cargo vessel rather than ridden, compromising the narrative of continuous overland travel.[6] In the Andes and Amazon regions, unreliable power grids, frequent outages, and rugged paths exacerbated delays, with charging interruptions common due to infrastructural deficits that favored fossil-fuel backups over self-sustaining EV capabilities.[30] These empirical dependencies illustrated the systemic barriers to long-distance electric adventuring in developing areas without extensive preemptive fossil-assisted support.[44]Reception and Controversies
Critical Reviews and Ratings
Critics praised Long Way Up for its engaging portrayal of friendship and adventure between Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman, highlighting their renewed camaraderie following Boorman's near-fatal accident, which served as a catalyst for the journey.[103] The series' cinematography was frequently commended for capturing breathtaking landscapes across 13 countries, from the rugged terrains of Patagonia to the diverse ecosystems of Central America, enhanced by advanced drone footage that provided immersive visuals unavailable in prior installments.[104] Released exclusively on Apple TV+ on September 18, 2020, the documentary was hailed by some as a milestone in demonstrating the feasibility of long-distance electric vehicle travel, despite logistical hurdles.[105] The show garnered a perfect 100% Tomatometer score from five professional reviews on Rotten Tomatoes, reflecting consensus on its entertainment value as a travelogue with suspenseful elements introduced by the electric motorcycles' limited range and charging dependencies.[106] On IMDb, it holds an average rating of 8.2 out of 10 based on approximately 5,900 user votes, though professional critiques focused more narrowly on narrative strengths.[2] Metacritic lacks an aggregate critic score due to insufficient reviews but features positive commentary on the "lovely travelogue" aspect and the duo's chemistry.[107] Some reviewers noted drawbacks in pacing, attributing slowdowns to repetitive depictions of charging sessions and logistical delays inherent to the electric setup, which occasionally disrupted the road-trip momentum.[108] Others critiqued the production for glossing over technical failures and emphasizing a supportive crew's role, which reduced the sense of raw improvisation seen in earlier series like Long Way Round, potentially making the endeavor feel overproduced rather than authentically perilous.[109] While not detracting from the core appeal, these elements led to observations of preachiness in promoting electric vehicles without fully confronting empirical challenges like range anxiety in remote areas.[53]| Aggregator | Critic Score | Number of Reviews |
|---|---|---|
| Rotten Tomatoes | 100% | 5[106] |
| Metacritic | N/A | Insufficient[107] |