by Suff » 06 Aug 2018, 18:16
Yes meds, but so were drivers and conductors and so was fuel. A bus driver in London earns between £20,000 and £31,000 a year, depending on experience.
Also people, especially from outside the city, tend to use cars. So busses are even less used.
Aggers, whilst I do agree with the sentiment that a simpler life might be a better life, for a lot of people, solving the climate crisis and the attendant energy problem requires a rapid move forward, not backwards.
We are where we are and mobility is a key foundation for our economy and our lives. Yes I would prefer that the school run was not happening for people who live less than a mile from school, but the only way to do that would be to ban vehicles from school roads for an hour either side of school start and end. This would cause quite a lot of other problems.
What I would like to see is that post Brexit the UK drops the EU tariffs on Chinese solar products (It was only to protect Germany anyway), then push heavily into renewables in all areas.
Not that I'll see it, but we can always hope. Even Chinese solar products have gone up in price because the two largest Chinese companies making them went bust after the EU levied their taxes.
There is even some thinking that when we get enough EV cars on the roads, their batteries can be used to even out the supply problems. Especially in homes where old EV batteries can be used to charge in the night and ease the peak load during the day.
We need to keep moving forward but also we need to keep innovating at a local level and rivers are a really good opportunity for the UK to do that.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.