Elan Shapiro wrote:
> Have You Driven a Bus or a Train Lately? 
> <http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/16/opinion/16goodman.html?ref=opinion>http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/16/opinion/16goodman.html?ref=opinion

Mass transit projects of the kind Goodman describes (I've copied
the article below) represent our best hope for some kind of graded
descent into a lower-energy economy.  The alternative is not
bicycles everywhere, it's a general societal collapse.  We've
wired things together too tightly to withstand a sudden change.
Societal complexity proceeds relatively continuously on the way
up, but as Joseph Tainter points out, this is a one-way process;
it's almost impossible to drop back just a little technologically.
Societies that start falling backwards generally drop back several
centuries in development before they find a new equilibrium.  If
you don't fancy a sixteenth-century level of health care,
nutrition, education, and human rights, this is a problem.

I've been hoping that Obama is pushing for an auto company bailout
in order to keep GM on life support just long enough to
nationalize it and retool.  Goodman points out that GM used to be
in the train business; I've ridden a number of times in Amtrak
sleepers manufactured by GM back in the 1950s and 1960s.  If
you're already set up to do wheels and engines and sheet metal,
the switchover isn't that hard.  And (as someone on NPR pointed
out recently) if you're set up to handle bearings and rotors,
switching over to making wind turbines isn't that hard, either.

The interesting question is whether we can move quickly enough to
fall back to a somewhat lower level of complexity and energy use
before we run out of the resources to retool.  It's going to be
close.

Jon

==================================================================

The New York Times
November 16, 2008
Op-Ed Contributor
Have You Driven a Bus or a Train Lately?
By ROBERT GOODMAN

Amherst, Mass.

THE federal government is giving General Motors, Ford and Chrysler
$25 billion in low-interest loans, and the companies are asking
for up to $25 billion more. These same companies have spent
millions of dollars lobbying against federal fuel-economy
standards and are suing to overturn the emissions standards
imposed by California and other states. In exchange for the loans,
Congress should first insist that the automakers stop fighting
these standards. But it should also make sure that better outcomes
will result from these billions than just fuel-efficient cars.

The Obama administration should ask the companies, as a condition
of financial assistance, to begin shifting from being just
automakers to becoming innovative "transportmakers." As Barack
Obama’s new chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, recently said: "You
don’t ever want a crisis to go to waste. It’s an opportunity to do
important things you would otherwise avoid."

As transportmakers, the companies could produce vehicles for
high-speed train and bus systems that would improve our travel
options, reduce global warming, conserve energy, minimize
accidents and generally improve the way we live.

This better way forward has been kicking around Washington for
more than 35 years. In a prescient 1972 article in The Atlantic,
Stewart Udall, an interior secretary under John F. Kennedy and
Lyndon B. Johnson, warned of America’s excessive dependence on
cars and called for this approach.

At a time when almost no politicians and industry leaders were
paying attention to this problem, Mr. Udall made a bleak but
accurate prediction. He wrote that "the oil needs of the other
industrialized countries are growing faster than ours" and that
this "surge of demand will soon begin to send shock waves through
the American economy and transportation system."

"Unless we exercise foresight and devise growth-limits policies
for the auto industry, events will thrust us into a crisis that
will lead to a substantial erosion of our domestic oil supply as
well as the independence it provides us with," Mr. Udall wrote. He
predicted that the cost of petroleum imports would "give the
Middle Eastern suppliers a dangerous leverage over our
transportation system as well."

But Mr. Udall recognized that the country could not afford the
economic consequences of losing all of the automobile industry’s
jobs and profits. He proposed that the auto companies branch out
into "exciting new variants of ground transportation" to produce
minibuses, "people movers," urban mass transit and high-speed
intercity trains. Instead of expanding the Interstate highway
system, he suggested that the road construction industry take on
"huge new programs to construct mass transit systems." And he
called for building "more compact, sensitively planned
communities" rather than continuing urban sprawl.

As we now know, warnings like these went unheeded, and Americans
became ever more car-dependent. And now, the auto industry is
asking for government money that promises, even with more
fuel-efficient cars, to give us more of the same. Instead of
supporting companies that want to put as many cars on the road as
possible, we need a transformational strategy.

As part of its loan package, the government should insist on the
development of "transportmaker business plans" from the car
companies, with specific timelines for developing more
fuel-efficient cars. The companies should also provide detailed
plans to transform some of their factories into research and
manufacturing centers for the development of light-rail cars and
high-speed trains and buses. (In some cases, these could run on
existing tracks and on the median strips of Interstate highways;
in others, entirely new lanes and tracks would be built.)

Even before Mr. Udall, there was ample precedent for these
ideas. In the early 1930s, G.M. joined with other companies to
develop the Burlington Zephyr, a radically innovative train that
broke world speed records and cut train travel times in
half. During World War II, the auto companies converted their
factories to build not only military trucks and jeeps, but also
airplanes, weapons, tanks and other vehicles. Ford’s Willow Run
plant built thousands of B-24 bombers, becoming the world’s
biggest bomber plant.

The research and production capacity that the car companies built
during the 20th century could be adapted for the needs of the
21st. But other companies should be able to bid for the same
opportunities.

Stewart Udall rejected the view that American prosperity depended
on Detroit producing ever more cars. The financial crisis gives us
a second chance to make his vision happen.

Robert Goodman, a professor of environmental design at Hampshire
College, is the author, most recently, of "The Luck Business."

_______________________________________________
For more information about sustainability in the Tompkins County area, please 
visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/ 

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