Michael Palin on CO2, cars and the like:
But as fast as car commuting schemes are
cutting private car journeys, the ever-increasing numbers of shopping
malls and out-of-town retail parks are increasing them. We live in a
country that gets steamed up about increased fuel prices yet has the
highest proportion of four-wheel-drive SUVs in Europe. Do people just
not make the connection? I would advise the owners of some of the great
tanks that I see toiling up to the 132- metre summit of Highgate Hill
in London to send them to Pakistan, where they’re actually needed, and
take a bus instead.
Commercial sense and common sense demand continuing and
generous investment to increase the capacity of the railways. Longer,
more frequent trains, longer platforms, more user-friendly and
well-staffed stations, and continued improvements in signalling, will
pay off handsomely, both commercially and environmentally.
One small fact that rather harms this idea. With the dual developments of larger and heavier trains and smaller and lighter cars with higher fuel efficiency, cars now emit less CO2 per mile travelled per passenger than trains do. Yes, really, trains emit more.
Which brings me to the development of clean,
fuel-efficient, environmentally friendly vehicles. I can’t believe
we’re taking so long to get round to this. Could it be that the
internal combustion engine has hypnotised us all for so long that it
will require not only engineering expertise but also the creation of a
whole new mindset to come up with effective and commercial alternatives?
Lots of people working on it. Lots of money being spent. In fact, (I think this is true) the largest investor in Ballard Systems, which is struggling to make fuel cells viable, is GM. The sad truth is that engineering takes time, we cannot simply wish for something to appear.
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