some park-and-rides using hybrid or electric buses
It appears that London is going to move to Hydrogen buses due to their range and are cheaper to run, one bus can run all day on one charge and be refilled within minutes, first batch start running in May and will start with 20 buses and will increase as the year moves on
good news for some.
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ANYONE wanting to increase town centre access ignores the internet and its impact on shopping....
The trends on that are obvious: anyone wanting better accees and spending £millions is wasting their money..
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Agreed. Part of the reason for the decline of high street shops and the growth of internet shopping is that town centre streets are full of buses and vans (even more vans although the shops are declining), and the car parks are full of all-day parkers working in town centre offices.
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I was born in 1953 - not vastly different from many that post on here. Then there were around 4m cars on the road, today there are 34m. Had car ownership increased at the same rate as population there would be less than 6m on the roads today.
So in the space of 67 years:
- we do a main shop once a week/month, not every other day
- we have built retail parks and motorways where none existed before
- today 36% commute by car, and 3% walk - a complete reversal
- there were proper local shops (butcher, baker, greengrocer etc)
- we didn't have internet, on-line shopping, smartphones, double glazing etc
- leisure air travel was mostly the preserve of the truly wealthy
The freedom allowed by the car has enabled huge changes in the way live, shop, socialise, entertain, interact with family and friends. Many of these changes I'm happy to embrace, but they come at a cost and cannot be extended infinitely.
The "can't possibly do it" or similiar responses are understandable, but frankly pointless. It is abundantly clear that the way we lived etc was very different for all but the last 50- 60 years. Like it or not, change will be forced on us by events - and alternative societal structures are entirely feasible.
The only real issue is how engage to make those changes as painless as possible and preserve those aspects we value most. Failure to engage will ensure your views are not considered.
At 67 I could just bury head in the sand and assume that my inevitable shuffle from the mortal coil will occur before I am forced to change, but I would also like to leave the place in good order for my children and grandchildren!
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Like it or not, change will be forced on us by events - and alternative societal structures are entirely feasible. The only real issue is how engage to make those changes as painless as possible and preserve those aspects we value most.
The real problems arise when the (fixed) space can no longer accommodate the growing population, which starts to fight over it. Come to think of it, that space is not fixed, it is shrinking slowly because of expanding deserts and melting icecaps. Africans are trying to escape to Europe already, and I wonder how long Australians will continue to enjoy living with annual forest fires.
It was said many years ago that the deciding wars will not be about shortage of fuel, but drinking water.
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"expanding deserts and melting icecaps"
The data does not support that statement.
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/nasa-study-mass-gains-of-antarctic-ice-sheet-greater-than-losses
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<< The data does not support that statement. >>
So the Arctic is not heading for disappearance, and there are no huge icesheets breaking off the Antarctic ? It must be fake news again.
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"expanding deserts and melting icecaps"
The data does not support that statement.
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/nasa-study-mass-gains-of-antarctic-ice-sheet-greater-than-losses
That's ten years old and refers to the Antarctic. Judging by more recent reports things may have changed since. It doesn't cover losses of Arctic ice - see Greenland in particular - or the encroachment of desert into previously fertile land in Sahara's fringes.
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Like it or not, change will be forced on us by events - and alternative societal structures are entirely feasible. The only real issue is how engage to make those changes as painless as possible and preserve those aspects we value most.
The real problems arise when the (fixed) space can no longer accommodate the growing population, which starts to fight over it. Come to think of it, that space is not fixed, it is shrinking slowly because of expanding deserts and melting icecaps. Africans are trying to escape to Europe already, and I wonder how long Australians will continue to enjoy living with annual forest fires.
It was said many years ago that the deciding wars will not be about shortage of fuel, but drinking water.
If climate change is a natural occurrence which in my opinion (not wanted I know) is, then people would still have to either acclimatise to the changes or move to better climates, as for water- there is plenty of it so I really dont see the problem, as for saving water, well, its been here for billions of years so doubt its going anywhere soon
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If climate change is a natural occurrence which in my opinion (not wanted I know) is, then people would still have to either acclimatise to the changes or move to better climates, as for water- there is plenty of it so I really dont see the problem, as for saving water, well, its been here for billions of years so doubt its going anywhere soon
The thing with water is its a basic need for all living things, human animal and plant, and as privatising the water has shown in this country (another idiot political decision by the way) there's money to be made and almost no way to opt out because there's no competition, much like the railways, doesn't take much imagination how this could be abused.
In Britain our water problem will be in the south east, millions more people than the water supply was designed for and increasing every year.
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<< as for water- there is plenty of it so I really dont see the problem, as for saving water, well, its been here for billions of years so doubt its going anywhere soon >>
I am sure the overall quantity will be there, most of it in the sea. The amount available on land for drinking (and other uses) relative to the human demand will be the problem. And it looks as if we shall need new ways to catch it when it arrives in more torrential amounts.
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some park-and-rides using hybrid or electric buses
It appears that London is going to move to Hydrogen buses due to their range and are cheaper to run, one bus can run all day on one charge and be refilled within minutes, first batch start running in May and will start with 20 buses and will increase as the year moves on
good news for some.
Good news for everyone -it's important to trial new fuels and ways to get about
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They cannot be cheaper to run if they are buying the hydrogen at a realistic market price.
Hydrogen is at least roughly twice the price of petrol and has a low energy density so the range on a tank is not great.
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They cannot be cheaper to run if they are buying the hydrogen at a realistic market price.
Hydrogen is at least roughly twice the price of petrol and has a low energy density so the range on a tank is not great.
Expect they are getting it cheap whilst trailing it.
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The NHS has its faults, but the main reason that it's struggling is that there are too many patients.
Yet the German healthcare system works better than the NHS depsite having a similar population. The NHS has a lot of management issues that don't get resolved.
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My understanding is that the German healthcare system does not cover all medical treatment, so comparing it with the NHS is not valid.
Also - and this is purely anecdotal - my son and partner would not agree that the German healthcare system is actually that good.
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Paul Valentine esq
All valid and I agree, it is a totally stupid idea, for all the reasons stated. I think they may forget about the park and ride and introduce a bicycle and ride with eco friendly tyres on the bikes ….. of course. lol
Who the hell is Paul Valentine. I see the name quoted quite often by this poster. Does this poster not have his own opinions?
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I thnk Paul Valentine is his real name, posting like most of us under a nom de clavier.
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I thnk Paul Valentine is his real name, posting like most of us under a nom de clavier.
If you look through various posts from "A Driver Since' you'll find they have a certain je ne sais quoi.........
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Yes, it seems "Paul Valentine" is his name.
If you search his earliest posts you will find links to Youtube videos posted under the same name.
He posted formerly as "30 yr's a Professional Driver", a pseudonym which I know used to annoy Avant, with its greengrocer's apostrophe.
I'm not sure why he wishes to preface some of his posts with his name; authorship is usually stated at the end of a piece of writing.
Edited by FP on 01/02/2020 at 19:40
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lol Just trying to be unique, Yes full name is Paul peter Valentine, was not n amed after teh saints but after 2 of uncles apparently
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Edited by A Driver since 1988, HGV 2006 on 02/02/2020 at 17:53
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Only when the modern polluting timewasting habit of 'commuting' is kicked. In the typical English town where I worked for 40yrs, factories were within walking distance of home and shopkeepers lived above the shop. Professionals and factory owners lived in 'residential areas' which were usually within walking or cycling distance of their offices. (That's why my TR7 has only done 70,000 miles in 40yrs). Children and teachers walked to school. No-one knew what 'obesity' meant. Only large cities had 'commuters' because they built outwards, not upwards. It always amazes me how low rise London still is compared with other cities.
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Only when the modern polluting timewasting habit of 'commuting' is kicked.
How?
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Only when the modern polluting timewasting habit of 'commuting' is kicked.
How?
No easy answer. Sea change in human behaviour. More home work and home school - like rural Australia? Cities like Amsterdam? Small towns like Zermatt?
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<< No easy answer. Sea change in human behaviour. More home work and home school - like rural Australia? >>
'Authority' doesn't help, making cost savings by steadily centralising communal services such as schools - which get merged putting more kids out of walking range, requiring buses, and more often parents' cars - and hospitals, which to provide the increasingly expensive treatments have to concentrate, making patients travel further. There used to be 'cottage hospitals', but they have mostly gone long ago.
But I don't think Brits like the idea of living over the shop like Parisians do.
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<< No easy answer. Sea change in human behaviour. More home work and home school - like rural Australia? >>
'Authority' doesn't help, making cost savings by steadily centralising communal services such as schools - which get merged putting more kids out of walking range, requiring buses, and more often parents' cars - and hospitals, which to provide the increasingly expensive treatments have to concentrate, making patients travel further. There used to be 'cottage hospitals', but they have mostly gone long ago.
But I don't think Brits like the idea of living over the shop like Parisians do.
One of the other pieces of hypocritical behaviour by us Brits is that we constantly bemoan the demise of our town centres, especially of the small retailers that, for hundreds of years populated them, and yet we vote with our wallets and feet and much prefer (given the choice) to either shop online or go to convenient out-of-town shopping parks and hypermarkets.
Aside from a few places (often because they are a very well-off area and mainly populated by wealthy retirees), most towns that have tried to bring back small-to medium sized shops in town centres, especially specialist shops such as butchers, greengrocers and clothing stores have all (eventually) failed because the local population tut-tuts at the higher prices (what do they expect - big and online retailers benefit from economies of scale) and having to trapse around many shops in poor weather and little parking available.
You see campains coming and going, town meetings called by less than 0.1% of people bothering to attend, nor do any of them wish to 'get involved' (read take any sort of role or responsibility) for taking things further to try and achieve what they supposedly want - they always want 'someone else' or 'the council' (or governemnt) to do it all for them, then blaming them when things do belly up.
We want something we're not apparently prepared to pay an extra price for. The issue with cars is that similar we want all the benefits but not the cost of having them. And we always want everyone else to carry the burden of any downsides. Rather a sad indictment on modern society - rights without responsibilities. Me-me-me.
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Only when the modern polluting timewasting habit of 'commuting' is kicked. In the typical English town where I worked for 40yrs, factories were within walking distance of home and shopkeepers lived above the shop. Professionals and factory owners lived in 'residential areas' which were usually within walking or cycling distance of their offices. (That's why my TR7 has only done 70,000 miles in 40yrs). Children and teachers walked to school. No-one knew what 'obesity' meant. Only large cities had 'commuters' because they built outwards, not upwards. It always amazes me how low rise London still is compared with other cities.
I completely agree with you JohnF, but sadly that vision of the Britain, nay Jerusalem that you and i grew up in, would have the snowflakes weeping in the ailes, charges of 'isms, phobias and white supremacy :-) being hurled around with gay abandon, do you remember people when gay was such a nice word?
During the 70's and 80's especially as i travelled the country every day, factories would be closing at an alarming rate, a few months later a shopping centre or flats would go up on the site, the new industry is warehousing where rows of gigantic buildings have gone up, almost all on green sites, placed on the outskirts of previous small industrial towns that everyone except for a few on the wrong side of town have to drive there, public transport almost never covers these places...i know this warehouse blight isn't an issue at Chipping Norton by the way.
The irony of course is these places rammed to the rafters with foreign made tat all handled by foreign made forklifts and parcel handling conveyors require few workers compared to factories, a deskilled workforce at that, the great increase has been in pen pushers jobs, which apparently computers were going to do away with the need, almost all requiring commuting into large cities for millions of people and these are the very jobs which could be home based or set up in small satellite offices throughout the country.
The changing of our previously quite self sufficient localities has led not just to a transient workforce, but the massive movements of goods, from abroad in ships via containers almost all by road to warehouse, from whence they will be redistributed over the entire country to buyers RDC's and then redistributed again to shops and supermarkets, all by road, and all of this for products we no longer make to begin with and which will be either broken or obsolete, being unrepairable, in a few short years at best, even if the consumer isn't one of those who must have the latest and dumps or sells on the still functioning previous item...cars being a prime example of this,
Edited by gordonbennet on 03/02/2020 at 11:42
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The NHS has its faults, but the main reason that it's struggling is that there are too many patients.
Actually, Avant, the number of patients per head of population might be less then twenty years ago thanks to a more healthy environment. The NHS is struggling because there are too few doctors, nurses and hospital beds. When I qualified in 1972 there were around 30,000 FTE GPs and around 30,000 solicitors. Now, despite the profusion of new medical schools there are still only about 30,000 FTE GPs probably because parts of the country are now so unpleasant no-one wants to work there and the incentives to attract doctors to them have disappeared. However, there are now around 100,000 solicitors, many engaged in suing the NHS for humungous sums thanks to our expensive dysfunctional NLS (national legal service.)
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However, there are now around 100,000 solicitors, many engaged in suing the NHS for humungous sums thanks to our expensive dysfunctional NLS (national legal service.)
Both branches of the legal profession are over populated. A few big firms make respectable money but the Law Society Gazette has a never ending stream of reports of firms in difficulty. Even some of the big names that act in PI claims (qv Slater Gordon)
Large numbers of Solicitors barely make ends meet and, away from high profit stuff like Planning and Corporate it's little if any better at the bar.
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<< However, there are now around 100,000 solicitors, many engaged in suing the NHS for humungous sums thanks to our expensive dysfunctional NLS >>
And one of the most counterproductive ideas is fining the NHS, already financially strapped, for its shortcomings.
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Had jobs that existed in 1970 (50 years ago) been lost and not replaced, unemployment would likely be 30%+. Jobs lost include coal mining 0.3m, steel industry 0.3m, manufacturing 5.0m, agriculture and fishing 0.25m + typists, secretaries, milkmen, lollipop men, librarians, meter readers, bank clerks, etc etc.
This happened as overall employment rose from 24m to 33m (mostly due to increases in female empoyment) with unemployment at about current levels.
New jobs that never existed before + large increases in other industries has balanced the lost employment - IT, systems analysts, education, pharmaceuticals, legal, financial, banking, media etc etc.
This really illustrates that things change radically as time passes - some aspects are good, some ok, and some unwelcome. But there is no good reason for the current status quo to persist indefinitely - personal transport included. King Canute thought he could hold back the tide - he was wrong.
The only question is how fast change happens, and what the consequence of being left behind is!
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I hadn't realised you were a medic, John. Your knowledge will be greater than mine, but I was thinking of two things in terms of patient numbers: (a) in the ten years (1990s) when SWMBO worked for a GP practice, the number of patients demanding referral to consultants more than doubled; and (b) although I agree that lifestyles are generally more healthy, my generation of baby-boomers are going to live longer and need more medical attention as we get older.
Indeed, there are a lot of solicitors about, and even more of my profession (chartered accountants)! Maybe the answer is that the public, if not more numerous, are generally more demanding, and more inclined to be litigious.
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Maybe the answer is that the public, if not more numerous, are generally more demanding, and more inclined to be litigious.
That's because we follow America. Sue someone if they look at you. Drive ever bigger cars, but on a medieval infrastructure that was never designed for it. And soon it'll be vaste swathes of monoculture crops devoid of any wildlife, feeding the endless overbreeding millions.
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"...feeding the endless overbreeding millions."
“The birth rate in England and Wales has fallen to its lowest level for at least 80 years, official figures have revealed.
In 2018 there were 657,076 live births, a decrease of 3.2 per cent since 2017 and 9.9 per cent down since 2012.” (Independent)
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"...feeding the endless overbreeding millions."
“The birth rate in England and Wales has fallen to its lowest level for at least 80 years, official figures have revealed.
In 2018 there were 657,076 live births, a decrease of 3.2 per cent since 2017 and 9.9 per cent down since 2012.” (Independent)
OK, got carried away with that bit, I was thinking more globally, as farming will beome more intensive there as it will here. But you can't deny that the population is growing, however you analyse the figures.
And as for the reign of the car - something will have to change, because many commuter roads get gridlocked every day now and hardly move. Having one person sitting in a ton and a half of metal at a standstill every day on a carriageway pumping out fumes then multiplying that by millions just to get to work is madness.
Dozens of new car adverts depicting a dreamy driver cruising down empty roads in the middle of nowhere? The above is the reality.
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I have to admire the confidence with which posters on here from every side of the debate make long term predictions.
My (very) lifelong experience of studying a vast variety of such predictions is that none of them ever came true. Things confidently expected to happen in 10, 20 30, ... years didn't. Most of what did create real change was not even dreamed of until just a few years before it arrived big time.
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Very true.
I can remember being in Junior School in the late 70's and being told that one day wars will be fought over water supplies and that we had about 20-30 years of oil available until it then rapidly ran out.
Not sure how close to either of those predictions we are near yet?
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