by Tanada » Fri 27 Apr 2012, 06:37:54
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dsula', 'E')urope, like anybody else, takes the cheapest option available. And that is most often truck, not train, especially if you take the first and last few miles into consideration.
You get as 'long-haul' as the continent is large. For some strange reason people on one end of the empire always want stuff from the other end. Oranges from Spain to Hamburg. Mercedes cars from Germany to Napoli. Chocolate from Belgium to Portugal, etc. Not much different than Oranges from Florida to Vermont.
Hamburg to Napoli 1448 km
Hamburg to Barcelona 1472 km
Brussels to Lisbon 1709 km
Vermont to Florida 2353 km
Los Angeles to New York City 4492 km
Seattle to Savannah 4659 km.
Just for fun
Sault Ste. Marie, MI to Erie, MI 605 km
Sault Ste Marie, MI to Cincinnati, OH 937 km
Sault Ste. Marie, MI to Nashville, TN 1323 km
To be fair when I said long haul trucking I was thinking anything over 500 km, but a truly huge number of trucks go from coast to coast in the USA every week and that distance is around 4500 km. Lisbon, Portugal to Moscow, Russia is 3903 km driving distance and I suspect not many trucks are driving that far in Europe every week. I am ready to be shown wrong here, but most people have do not grasp just how big the USA is in terms of driving distance.