by AgentR11 » Fri 23 Mar 2012, 21:18:09
This topic does come up often enough; not surprising given that titles like “End/Death of Suburbia” are almost sysnonymous with the Peak Oil subject itself. But I'd like to offer a modest rebuttal here.
First off, climate change and peak oil are going to make everyone suffer to some extent; there's no avoiding it, urban city dweller, suburban commuter, rural homesteader, all will pay in very personal ways for our excesses.
So, why single out suburbia? I think it has to do with the Boomer generation's concept of building out freeways and manufacturing large tracts of single family housing, dependent upon a vehicle getting 10mpg on a good day, and invested with all sorts of power motif adjectives. It is certainly true enough, that peak oil would give that specific combination a very nasty trial; however, that isn't the world we are in now, and it certainly isn't the world things are moving towards. Instead, we are meeting peak oil conditions with much more durable, reliable, and efficient vehicles; we could, should we wish to do so, field vehicles getting 60-70mpg; and there are more than a few currently selling well that are in the 40mpg range. Coupled with the viability of telecommuting, remote offices, that the modern net makes possible; and you end up with a situation where those folks in Merriam, Kansas, can not only continue to work for downtown Kansas City companies; but could just as easily be working for companies in Dallas, TX or Chicago, IL.
That takes the issue of the commute challenge off the table; what's left? Trade and transport of goods. But we already know that on a pound-mile basis, even at $4 / gallon of gasoline, people still make a solid profit shipping WATER IN PLASTIC BOTTLES from place to place. Get it? There doesn't exist a price for gasoline that will create a challenge to getting food and goodies into the stores. Bob LowerClass might have trouble paying to drive his truck to the store for beer, but meh, not the end of the world if he actually has to walk a mile to the grocery store.
So, commute, food, trade, all tolerable, if pricier. In other words, we all get to suffer some, but city center isn't happy joy-joy, and suburbia isn't doom eternal.
Now, Climate Change. Again, I'm not exactly seeing how being in Merriam is worse climatalogically than Kansas City; and certainly it couldn't be worse than downtown Houston with its muddy, brackish, mosquito infested, bayous nor NY,NY either. This again, doesn't imply horror for suburbs, nor advantages for the city core. They both get to suffer nice and good.
Yes we are, as we are,
And so shall we remain,
Until the end.