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#161
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Wolfgang Schwanke wrote:
wrote in : Wolfgang Schwanke wrote: wrote in : There are no alternatives to oil. The electric grid uses a vanishingly small amount of oil. The transportation system uses a vanishingly small amount of electricity. Concerning ground transport, there's rail which nowadays is mostly electric. The combustion engine is really only indispensable in air and ship transport, as you say, and a fraction of ground transport which for various reasons can't be transferred to rail. Most rail is diesel electric; there is a diesel engine driving a generator. There are no electrified rails or overhead wires between LA and Chicago. OK you're writing from an American perspective. In Europe most long- and mid distance connections are electrified. You'll only see diesel traction on short sections. And all city transport is electric by definition. If the USA doesn't have the infrastructure in place, I say it's time to build it up. The next problem is to convince people to actually use it, i.e. to actually use it for private travel as well as commercial transports. The latter is a problem that Europe has too (if to a lesser extent). OK your're writing from a European perspective. You do realize most of our states are bigger than most of your countries? Also, cities here are a bit different too. It is all "city" from Santa Monica to San Bernardino, for example, but they are about 60 miles apart. Unless you run tracks from every distribution center to every local retail outlet, rail can never be more than a small fraction of the transportation system. Make that a large fraction, otherwhise I agree. But there's a lot of things you can do. You don't need trucks going 1000s of kilometers across the continent. Ship the stuff to the nearest railway station and let the trains bring it to the destination city, then ship it by truck the small distance to wherever it's needed. Build factories close to railway lines and vice versa, so the last mile gets shorter or disappears altogether. Commuting in big cities can be done entirely by public transport, no need at all to have lots of freeways cut through the suburbs. etc. etc. Both my wife and I commute over 50 miles one way. My next door neighbor commutes 60. Most US areas are spread out horizontally, not vertically as in Europe. The vertical places, like New York, are few and far between. Of course we'll need the supermarket delivered by truck, we need ambulance cars, police cars, people in rural areas will need cars for their daily needs, and city dwellers will want to drive to their weekend destinations. But we can shift the weight a lot if we want to. Private cars can become mostly leisure toys. Not with 30 to 60 mile commutes being common for most places. Rail is good for hauling bulk items, such as coal, over long distances between major hubs. That is the American perspective again. ![]() Of course, we have thousands of land miles to worry about. I can drive all day in one direction without leaving my state. There are methods for making oil from coal. Somewhere I read that the process has been revived in China. If it's so uneconomical, why are they doing it? As I said before, such processes have been doable for about a half century now. No one is doing it commercially because it is too expensive. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sasol OK, there's on start up. With the current price of oil I wouldn't expect it to be too far in the future for it to be generally viable. Regards -- Excessive verbing weirds the language. http://www.wschwanke.de/ usenet_20031215 (AT) wschwanke (DOT) de -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#162
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Gig 601XL Builder wrDOTgiaconaATsuddenlink.net wrote:
Wolfgang Schwanke wrote: About the wonders of electic trains. Yes it is the American persepctive but you need to realize a little more American perspective. The distances here are just plain longer than what you are dealing with in Europe. The straight line distance between Paris and Berlin ~450 miles. In the US that would get you from New York to Detroit. To get to Los Angles you'd have to go another 1900 miles. Which is further than the distance from either the Northern tip of Denmark to the Southern end of Italy or from Gibralter to the Polish border. Would it be nice to have electric rail serving the majority of the US, hell yes, but after WWII we decided a huge highway system would be the way to go and it served us well and help make the US the worlds largest economy. But trying to install an electric rail system now would be next to impossible. It has become alost impossible to add to the interstate system we already have. And there is one big plus to highways over rail. We don't grind to a halt every time a single union goes out on strike. And trucks can go over mountains that trains can't, which the US has a lot of. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#163
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#164
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Gig 601XL Builder writes:
... after WWII we decided a huge highway system would be the way to go and it served us well and help make the US the worlds largest economy. The highway system helped to do that? What leads you to that conclusion? |
#165
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#166
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#167
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Montblack writes:
Phenomenal growth and potential for more growth. With whose resources? |
#168
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#169
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: writes: And trucks can go over mountains that trains can't, which the US has a lot of. Trains cross the Rockies every day. What other mountains did you have in mind? Why, you gonna go out and scale them, fjukkwit? Bertie |
#170
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: Gig 601XL Builder writes: ... after WWII we decided a huge highway system would be the way to go and it served us well and help make the US the worlds largest economy. The highway system helped to do that? What leads you to that conclusion? Good grief. Bertie |
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