I didn't feel need to comment more about already so flawed post, but OK. https://www.quora.com/How-much-energy-is-required-to-build-an-electric-car
You don't believe everything your read on the internets, do you?
On that page, in the very first paragraph:
The Energy Density of gasoline is 44.4 MJ per kg, so it is useful to think that the energy in 1,125 liters of fuel (roughly 22 full tanks of gasoline) is what is needed to make a new EV! "
WRONG because 1 litre of gasoline isn't 1 kg of mass, more like 0.7[kg/l] => you'd need 1462 litres. (search energy density in the wikipedia).
2nd paragraph:
The battery capacity on Tesla’s Model S is 85kWh or 306MJ. You will need to fully charge your Model S 164 times to have spent 50GJ of energy or the equivalent of making another EV"
WRONG, because the best case round trip efficiency of li-ion batts is 90..95%, and still have to add to that charger losses. Hint: Teslas have calefaction for the batteries (for charging in cold places) and cooling (to dissipate batt's heat during recharge).
this will give you approximately 70,000 km (range for the 85 kWh battery is 426 km)
I'm glad to see he estimates 19.9 kWh per 100 km. That's not the real thing either (under normal driving habits), but at least isn't the much lower silly figures most EV fanboys try to make us believe.
Then this:
On an ICV, which will take 60 full tanks (50L tank) to compare with its 34 GJ at 25% eff
WRONG, look, 60[tanks]*50[litre]*34.2[MJ/l] -> 102.6 GJ, but 34GJ*4 is 136 GJ.
I stopped there. You get the idea, don't you?