Keep on Trucking – Not!
June 23rd, 2008
This will be the first of several columns on the state of transportation in the U.S. Regular readers of this column know that for years I have predicted the current high price of oil, the sales collapse of the truck and SUV markets and the need for electric cars. In addition it has been stated here that the future of U.S. transportation must include high speed trains, and a better integration of airplane, train and local mass transit. Finally it should start being clear to anyone paying attention [still too few of the population] that the now permanent high price — relative to prices since the mid 1980s – of gasoline will have a profound effect on behavior and our perceptions of where to live and work and how to live. Our culture, our society, our economy and the landscape of this country are about ready to undergo significant and massive change.
The recent news that SUV and pick up truck sales had plummeted compared to last year is worthy of comment. The obvious reason is the price of gasoline. As I wrote here recently, $4 a gallon gas is finally inflicting enough pain to change behavior. All the cars that showed the greatest sales growth year to year were small cars that get good gas mileage. For the first time in 17 years, a car, rather than a truck was the best selling vehicle. It is about time.
Decades ago trucks used to be vehicles that were used for business or professional reasons. Then in the 1980s they crossed over to the consumer private vehicle market. I never fully understood why a man living in a city would drive to and from work and around town in a huge pickup truck. It was one of the more absurd manifestations of big is better that is rampant in America. Huge trucks, jacked up on big tires must be compensating for something. In the 1960s if a man wanted to be a manly cowboy he smoked Marlboros. In the 1990s he drove a truck or a big SUV.
It is funny how quickly these big pickup trucks and big SUVs now look dated and seem so out of place. The “small is the new big†state of mind from what used to be called the environmental movement has taken root in the automotive market. Hollywood stars and power brokers used to drive around in Hummers and other big SUVs, now they drive hybrids and get on waiting lists for electric and hydrogen cars. Suburban mommies who still drive massive SUVs now speak apologetically about driving them, when just a few years ago they thought of them as status symbols. Anyone who has tried to trade in a big vehicle for a smaller, more gas efficient car in the last two months has found that the trade in value has plummeted, in some cases close to zero as dealers know they won’t be able to sell them.
I have been certain for 3-4 years that this fundamental change in the vehicle market would occur. Peak oil and the explosive growth of developing economies assured that oil would reach current price levels and that these price levels would cause a radical shift in vehicle purchasing behavior. Psychologists and sociologists for decades have known that sometimes behavior will not change unless pain, in some cases severe pain was experienced. This economic pain at the pump is changing behavior at last. It is this pain that is and will forever change the vehicles that Americans drive. The world has changed and Americans are actually accepting as fact that gasoline will never again be cheap.
The personal self indulgence that was represented by driving wasteful vehicles and the total lack of an energy policy on the part of the U.S government for the last eight years, is now causing a lot of pain all the way around. The long term good news is that pain is often the first step toward transformation.
June 23rd, 2008 at 11:16 am
Hello David,
I am a retired, widowed DoD (astro/aero/electronic) engineer who has been expecting (awaiting) the big crunch that is nigh upon the human population of the Earth. It has been my expressed opinion that the cause while not simple was predictable. (1) Too damn many humans on the Earth with no logical movement to limit human reproduction. (2) Excessive human greed practiced by a relatively few humans which has perpetuated an economic philosophy of more more more production followed by more more more consumption, coupled with a faux free enterprise system of government guaranteed spoils to the wealthy friends of government officials and principals world wide.
I agree with the peak oil aficionados that it is the the achilles heel of our current economic system, (ably assisted by global warming); however the reality of the eventual end of the oil economy was not predicted in the recent past but in the advent of the oil boom. I am discouraged that very little press is given to the culprits I posit as the major causes of the imminent collapse of the so called society of human civilization. I am an old atheist and as such have no religious ax to grind nor fear of my demise; but I am concerned that the youth of today are in for a very close up view of an apocalyptic future of unpleasant and steep decline in living standards.
June 23rd, 2008 at 5:01 pm
What is the future of moving goods across the country and the world? Yes, costs will increase. I’m talking about 10 – 20 years from now when gas is REALLY expensive.
dk
June 23rd, 2008 at 8:29 pm
Looks like they’ll be sending all those trucks and SUVs to Dubai, where gas is just $1.36/gallon…
http://www.autobloggreen.com/2008/06/23/dubai-residents-not-in-any-rush-to-give-up-gas-guzzlers/
June 23rd, 2008 at 10:02 pm
Dave- If we are smart as a nation, transport in 10-20 years will be primarily on the ground and powered by electric and hydrogen powered battery cells and also solar power. Additionally there should be much more solar and electric rail and local or regional orientations will come into play regarding agriculture.
David
June 23rd, 2008 at 10:06 pm
Ken-
You are right on the money. My second book that I am beginning to work on basically positions humanity at a point in time when all the consequences of religious population of the planet and unfettered growth are coming home to roost. We will soon be at THE fork in the road. I believe that humanity will transform itself as we face all these global problems and that in 15 years there could be a new golden dawn. Good probability of that happening and conversely, probability of the the more apocalyptic path taken. Stay tuned. Sometime in about a year that book, “Evolution Shift” will come out. You are seeing thinkgs clearly. Thank you for the comment.
David
June 23rd, 2008 at 10:10 pm
Ethan-
Yes for now. I predict that within 5 years most, if not all countries that now subsidize lower priced gasoline, will have phased out those subsidies as they will be needed to subsidize food and water. When that happens SUVs will finally be recycled except for those that are in museums or in collections.
David
July 1st, 2008 at 2:32 am
thanks for article
June 24th, 2011 at 9:07 am
What is the future of moving goods across the country and the world? Yes, costs will increase. I’m talking about 10 – 20 years from now when gas is REALLY expensive.