I think I did raise this wrinkle in the last ebike thread you started...
TBF, there are lots of oddities like this eg sometimes better to get rid of old appliance (including all of the additional manufacturing emissions for the new one). This can be counter-intuitive - and the research somewhat specific in the conditions where it holds true. For example, washing dishes by hand turns out to be more carbon intensive than using a dishwasher, but only because there's an assumption that handwashing will use running hot water rather than fill a bowl (and I don't know anyone who does that!). Plus most of my hot water is generated by our solar panels so they can **** right off again. I suspect research like that simply allows middle class greens to assuage their conscience.
I tend to be an old school greeny in that I like to use as little as possible for as long as possible (although will happily admit I have my blind spots).
Incorporating other negative externalities such as mining and its impact on communities, end of life recycling etc, longevity etc may mean an intervention reduces carbon, but is still extremely crap for the planet and its people. Aluminium mining ain't great, for example:
https://www.greenspec.co.uk/building-design/aluminium-production-environmental-impact/
We are collectively using our planet's resources in a manner which means your kids (and their kids) - if you have any, are likely to face difficulties we didn't. I'll leave it to the reader to decide if they want to give future generations the finger or not. The flipside is that crisis is the mother of invention, but even here - I think the systems level change and collective thinking required to get from here to where we need to be might be beyond us as a species. But doubters have been proved wrong in the past...