by Half-Mad » Tue 29 Mar 2005, 00:41:39
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('NeoPeasant', 'R')oads without traffic seem to hold up pretty well, as
THIS LADY discovered in her ride thru the Chernobyl area.
I imagine the roads would wear quite slowly with mostly bicycle traffic.
True that, without the wear from having the cars, the roads will last a lot longer. But, they will still break down eventually. Instead of 20 years until the roads are unusable, it becomes 100 years for the roads to be bad enough that they can't be used. Likely a lot faster here in Canada, and such places where ice gets into the cracks.
As long as the roads last, the trucking industry will last. Even if everybody is banned from driving, due to lack of gasoline, there will still be trucking, to get the products to the stores. The trucking industry will likely keep going until the agricultural industry is about to start losing fertilizer, at which time both industries will likely decline at about the same rate. Although, before this happens, the products being shipped from China will likely have stopped, thus removing a large portion of the trucking industry when that happens.
As uber stated, trains are better. But, the lines aren't there in most areas. For the most part, in North America, the rail system is a joke. Here in Ottawa, there isn't even a subway system. There is only one light rail line, recently put in, because the tracks were already there, and it would have been too difficult to put in a road for the bus system. For a rail system to be a practical replacement, there would have to be rail lines going down every 2nd or 3rd street in all retail and industrial areas, in every city. Down about one in ten or twenty streets in residential areas. Also, there is a question of the energy for the trains. Electric trains need the electricity produced. The subway system for New York required enough electricity to power a town. Steam trains, burning wood, coal, or whatever, need a water tower every 9 miles. I suppose a coal burning train could have a car dedicated to water for the engine, but then all that much more power is needed to move the water.