The are local governments all over the world diligently working to collect hundreds of billions of dollars in taxes and hand them over to road construction companies in order to expand traffic carrying capacity to far above what exists today.
I just attended a "Governor's Transportation Summit" last Friday in Utah. It included appearances from the Governor, both our senators, our entire congressional delegation, and numerous mayors, county commisioners, and state legislators. I sat and listened to about 6 hours of speeches. The main message was that vehicle miles traveled in the state were going to most assuredly double by 2030 and that billions needed to be raised and spent to build the required traffic carrying capacity. Never once was there voiced any concern about whether the supplies of energy for transportation would be adequate to sustain all this projected traffic growth.
I did manage to pose a question near the end of whether there were any contingency plans within all these highway plans to deal with a worldwide energy supply crisis. The road advocates sat silently for a while, finally the question was fielded by a Utah Transit Authority official. He explained that large numbers of retired busses, and surplus light rail cars bought from other cities (still bearing their old paint jobs) were sitting in lots available to be put into emergency service.
I am thinking that I should buy me a cheap suit and take time off work to attend these roadbuilder's public input rallies. It would be an excellent time to introduce peak oil to the public and explain how it implies that hundreds of millions spent on highway expansion would be hundreds of millions wasted.
Has anyone else attempted any anti road activism based on the premise that peak oil will soon make additional traffic capacity redundant?





