by MrPC » Sat 13 Nov 2004, 22:36:38
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('khebab', 'D')on't forget that distances Americans are used to travel are huge compared to the European scale. Geography is also a factor, not only economy.
Geography of the continent is irrelevant really since most people would really only leave their little part of it a few times a year.
Urban layout and transport options are the real killer.
The car is the single highest energy consumer. Freight and holiday travel is insignificant in comparison.
Most US cities are designed to be navigated no other way. Most European cities pre-date the car, and while most people still choose to drive, the city is still capable of and probably still does offer other mobility options, including ones that use significantly less oil.
Now, the cities could be a few miles apart, they could be a thousand miles apart, but what really matters is can you both get people around the cities, get freight in, and get waste out, all in a scarce/expensive oil environment.
In Europe, the answer is probably yes. In the USA, the answer is almost certainly no. In places like Canada and Australia, we're somewhere in the middle.
The purpose of human life revolves around an endless need to extract ever increasing amounts of carbon out of the ground and then release it into the atmosphere.