by Leanan » Sun 10 Jul 2005, 10:32:23
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he cost of shipping to the local shops will also rise.
Yes, but that's still a more energy-efficient way to distribute goods.
EBay and Amazon have been a huge headache for transportation engineers. Instead of moving a truckload of widgets from point A to point B, you have dozens of trucks going from points A, B, and C to points W, X, Y, Z, AA, BB, etc. Trucks are "rolling warehouses," going door-to-door and producing heavy traffic on local roads that weren't designed for that kind of load.
Our old distribution system was more efficient. Goods went from factories around the Great Lakes out to warehouses at distribution centers, and from there to downtown Main St. or, later, large shopping malls or commercial areas. Often, the bulk of the "heavy lifting" was done via train, river, or canal.
I think we will eventually have to move back to this kind of system. That means not only no eBay, but no Wal-Marts out in the middle of nowhere.