by Armageddon » Mon 04 Dec 2006, 12:43:13
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'G')iven the degree to which business depends on jet air travel, it's likely that petroleum will be prioritized for aircraft long after it's been put on rationing for automobiles.
Between now & then, a lot more airline bankruptcies & consolidations.
Australians overseas might end up coming home to stay.
Americans with families across the US will take trains and buses.
All those aircraft rusting in the desert: yeah, a sad story indeed. Eventually to be harvested for parts to keep the remaining fleet flying.
yep, I have always thought of this. There will always be enough fuel to fly for the willing and able, in other words those who can afford it. Automobile fuel rationing will come way before planes become obsolete.
In the days after 9/11 it was creepy as hell to see no airplanes in the sky: the familiar woosh of jets gone like the calls of temporarily-extinct birds.
But when I was a kid, i.e. 3 - 4 years old, the sight of a 707 was indeed special, and flying was all the more so. To this day my response to people complaining at airports and onboard the planes, is "but it really is a miracle to travel three thousand miles in six hours."