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Oh crap!

nelliott

Cowboyatheart
http://business.financialpost.com/n...g-autos-says-study-that-shocking-the-industry

All fossil-fuel vehicles will vanish in 8 years in twin ‘death spiral’ for big oil and big autos, says study that’s shocking the industries
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, The Telegraph
No more petrol or diesel cars, buses, or trucks will be sold anywhere in the world within eight years. The entire market for land transport will switch to electrification, leading to a collapse of oil prices and the demise of the petroleum industry as we have known it for a century.


This is the futuristic forecast by Stanford University economist Tony Seba. His report, with the deceptively bland title Rethinking Transportation 2020-2030, has gone viral in green circles and is causing spasms of anxiety in the established industries.

We are on the cusp of one of the fastest, deepest, most consequential disruptions of transportation in history

Seba’s premise is that people will stop driving altogether. They will switch en masse to self-drive electric vehicles (EVs) that are ten times cheaper to run than fossil-based cars, with a near-zero marginal cost of fuel and an expected lifespan of 1 million miles.

Only nostalgics will cling to the old habit of car ownership. The rest will adapt to vehicles on demand. It will become harder to find a petrol station, spares, or anybody to fix the 2,000 moving parts that bedevil the internal combustion engine. Dealers will disappear by 2024.

Cities will ban human drivers once the data confirms how dangerous they can be behind a wheel. This will spread to suburbs, and then beyond. There will be a “mass stranding of existing vehicles”. The value of second-hard cars will plunge. You will have to pay to dispose of your old vehicle.

It is a twin “death spiral” for big oil and big autos, with ugly implications for some big companies on the London Stock Exchange unless they adapt in time.

Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images
Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images A man walks past electric cars and tricycles on a sidewalk in Beijing

The long-term price of crude will fall to US$25 a barrel. Most forms of shale and deep-water drilling will no longer be viable. Assets will be stranded. Scotland will forfeit any North Sea bonanza. Russia, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, and Venezuela will be in trouble.

It is an existential threat to Ford, General Motors, and the German car industry. They will face a choice between manufacturing EVs in a brutal low-profit market, or reinventing themselves a self-drive service companies, variants of Uber and Lyft.

They are in the wrong business. The next generation of cars will be “computers on wheels”. Google, Apple, and Foxconn have the disruptive edge, and are going in for the kill. Silicon Valley is where the auto action is, not Detroit, Wolfsburg, or Toyota City.

The shift, according to Seba, is driven by technology, not climate policies. Market forces are bringing it about with a speed and ferocity that governments could never hope to achieve.

“We are on the cusp of one of the fastest, deepest, most consequential disruptions of transportation in history,” Prof Seba said. “Internal combustion engine vehicles will enter a vicious cycle of increasing costs.”

The “tipping point” will arrive over the next two to three years as EV battery ranges surpass 200 miles and electric car prices in the US drop to $30,000. By 2022 the low-end models will be down to $20,000. After that, the avalanche will sweep all before it.

“What the cost curve says is that by 2025 all new vehicles will be electric, all new buses, all new cars, all new tractors, all new vans, anything that moves on wheels will be electric, globally,” Prof Seba said.

“Global oil demand will peak at 100 million barrels per day by 2020, dropping to 70 million by 2030.” There will be oil demand for use in the chemical industries, and for aviation, though Nasa and Boeing are working on hybrid-electric aircraft for short-haul passenger flights.

Seba said the residual stock of fossil-based vehicles will take time to clear but 95 per cent of the miles driven by 2030 in the US will be in autonomous EVs for reasons of costs, convenience, and efficiency. Oil use for road transport will crash from 8 million barrels a day to 1 million.

The cost per mile for EVs will be 6.8 cents, rendering petrol cars obsolete. Insurance costs will fall by 90 per cent. The average American household will save $5,600 per year by making the switch. The US government will lose $50 billion a year in fuel taxes. Britain’s exchequer will be hit pari passu.

“Our research and modelling indicate that the $10 trillion annual revenues in the existing vehicle and oil supply chains will shrink dramatically,” Prof Seba said.

Daniel Acker/Bloomberg
Daniel Acker/Bloomberg Elon Musk, chief executive of Tesla Motors, with a Tesla Roadster electric car in New York in 2010.

“Certain high-cost countries, companies, and fields will see their oil production entirely wiped out. Exxon-Mobil, Shell and BP could see 40 per cent to 50 per cent of their assets become stranded,” the report said.

These are all large claims, though familiar those on the cutting edge of energy technology. While the professor’s timing may be off by a few years, there is little doubt about the general direction.

India is drawing up plans to phase out all petrol and diesel cars by 2032, leap-frogging China in an electrification race across Asia. The brains trust of Primer Minister Mahendra Modi has called for a mix of subsidies, car-pooling, and caps on fossil-based cars. The goal is to cut pollution and break reliance on imported oil, but markets will pick up the baton quickly once the process starts.

China is moving in parallel, pushing for 7 million electric vehicles by 2025, enforced by a minimum quota for “new energy” vehicles that shifts the burden for the switch onto manufacturers. “The trend is irreversible,” said Wang Chuanfu, head of the Chinese electric car producer BYD, backed by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway.

At the same time, global shipping rules are clamping down on dirty high-sulphur oil used in the cargo trade, a move that may lead to widespread use of liquefied natural gas for ship fuel.

This is all happening much faster than Saudi Arabia and OPEC had assumed. The cartel’s World Oil Outlook last year dismissed electric vehicles as a fringe curiosity that would make little difference to ever-rising global demand for oil.

It predicted a jump in crude consumption by a further 16.4 million barrels a day to 109 million by 2040, with India increasingly taking over from China as growing market. The cartel said fossils will still make up 77 per cent of global energy use, much like today. It implicitly treated the Paris agreement on climate targets as empty rhetoric.

Whether OPEC believes its own claims is doubtful. Saudi Arabia’s actions suggest otherwise. The kingdom is hedging its bets by selling off chunks of the state oil giant Saudi Aramco to fund diversification away from oil.

OPEC, Russia, and the oil-exporting states are now caught in a squeeze and will probably be forced to extend output caps into 2018 to stop prices falling. Shale fracking in the US is now so efficient, and rebounding so fast, that it may cap oil prices in a range of US$45 to $55 until the end of the decade. By then the historic window will be closing.

Experts will argue over Seba’s claims. His broad point is that multiple technological trends are combining in a perfect storm. The simplicity of the EV model is breath-taking. The Tesla S has 18 moving parts, one hundred times fewer than a combustion engine car. “Maintenance is essentially zero. That is why Tesla is offering infinite-mile warranties. You can drive it to the moon and back and they will still warranty it,” Prof Seba said.

Self-drive “vehicles on demand” will be running at much higher levels of daily use than today’s cars and will last for 500,000 to 1 million miles each.

It has long been known that EVs are four times more efficient than petrol or diesel cars, which lose 80 per cent of their power in heat. What changes the equation is the advent of EV models with the acceleration and performance of a Lamborghini costing five or 10 times less to buy, and at least 10 times less to run.

“The electric drive-train is so much more powerful. The gasoline and diesel cars cannot possibly compete,” Seba said. The parallel is what happened to film cameras – and to Kodak – once digital rivals hit the market. It was swift and brutal. “You can’t compete with zero marginal costs,” he said.

The effect is not confined to cars. Trucks will switch in tandem. Over 70 per cent of US haulage routes are already within battery range, and batteries are getting better each year.

EVs will increase U.S. electricity demand by 18 per cent but that does not imply the need for more capacity. They will draw power at times of peak supply and release it during peak demand. They are themselves a storage reservoir, helping to smooth the effects of intermittent solar and wind, and to absorb excess base-load from power plants.

Mark Carney, the Governor of the Bank England and chairman of Basel’s Financial Stability Board, has repeatedly warned that fossil energy companies are booking assets that can never be burned under the Paris agreement.

He pointed out last year that it took only a small shift in global demand for coal to bankrupt three of the four largest coal-mining companies in short order. Other seemingly entrenched sectors could be just as vulnerable. He warned of a “Minsky moment”, if we do not prepare in time, where the energy revolution moves so fast that it precipitates a global financial crisis.

The crunch may be coming even sooner than he thought. The Basel Board may have to add the car industry to the mix. There will be losers. Whole countries will spin into crisis. The world’s geopolitical order will be reshaped almost overnight. But humanity as a whole should enjoy an enormous welfare gain.
 
Tony Seba refers to himself as an entrepreneur, not economist. He seems to have a knack for sensationalism.

Fossil fuels will become both rare and uber expensive, but not likely in the timeline he gives.
 
In my youth, I thought George Orwell and Arthur C. Clarke were 'visionaries.'

They meant well, and made for some sensationalized good reading, but predicting the future has never been an exact science.

I believe that 8 years from now, we can all still go shopping for an internal-combustion motorcycle of our choice.

The big question is: what color?! :dance
 
I read that tripe too.. sensationalism at it's worst along with all the other fake "news" stories we're being spoon-fed..:rolleyes
 
The underlying news is not fake and fairly accurate. The analysis is where things become questionable as you build layers of variables over variables.
 
A lot of nonsense. I've got a plug-in hybrid car and I love it, but there's no way I would own an electric-only car. I have to be able to drive my car long distances, and I simply can't do that on electricity only. Look at liberal, progressive New York state - there isn't a charging station within 50 miles of my house. You'd need many thousands of charging stations all over the map, and I don't see that happening any time soon. (I charge my car in my driveway by way of a standard outdoor outlet I had a local electrician install). And conventional cars disappearing in 8 years? There are cars around here that are 16 years old or older still on the road. Remember when they envisioned flying cars? We were all supposed to be flying around in those by now...

So while an electric car does not work for me, the plug-in Prius Prime does. I do all my local errands on electric-only "EV mode" and my running average over 4K miles stands at 81 mpg.

Harry
 
In my youth, I thought George Orwell and Arthur C. Clarke were 'visionaries.'

They meant well, and made for some sensationalized good reading, but predicting the future has never been an exact science.

I believe that 8 years from now, we can all still go shopping for an internal-combustion motorcycle of our choice.

The big question is: what color?! :dance

Or will they all be black!:laugh
 
Some visionaries are frightenly accurate, others not so much. Accurate predictions usually come from a solid base of related experience.
 
"Cities will ban human drivers once the data confirms how dangerous they can be behind a wheel."

Thought we knew that part already...
 
Just wait for driverless semi trucks. Maybe double bottom or triple bottom ones to boot. While we might see the hazards with this, just think how big the campaign contributions from the trucking companies can be once they eliminate the costs of having drivers.

I'm too old to worry. But if I was a young rascal I would want to have as much fun on my motorcycle as I could as quickly as possible before we are banned from the roadways. We don't make very big contributions and the AMA can't possibly make enough noise.
 
We already have driverless cars & semi-trucks. About 95% of all drivers I observe are not driving but talking or texting on their cell phones. :)
 
... if I was a young rascal I would want to have as much fun on my motorcycle as I could as quickly as possible before we are banned from the roadways. We don't make very big contributions and the AMA can't possibly make enough noise.

I concur.
 
BMW Motorrad Concept Link. The reinvention of urban mobility on two wheels.https://www.press.bmwgroup.com/glob...n-of-urban-mobility-on-two-wheels?language=en
BMW Group PressClub Global / 3h
At the Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este 2017, the BMW Group is presenting its vision of zero-emission urban mobility on two wheels: the BMW Motorrad Concept Link. Inspired by the BMW Motorrad Vision Next 100, the design study

<iframe src="https://m1ka.smugmug.com/frame/slideshow?key=cd5GMn&autoStart=1&captions=0&navigation=0&playButton=0&randomize=0&speed=3&transition=fade&transitionSpeed=2" width="800" height="600" frameborder="no" scrolling="no"></iframe>
 
Just wait for driverless semi trucks. Maybe double bottom or triple bottom ones to boot. While we might see the hazards with this, just think how big the campaign contributions from the trucking companies can be once they eliminate the costs of having drivers.

I'm too old to worry. But if I was a young rascal I would want to have as much fun on my motorcycle as I could as quickly as possible before we are banned from the roadways. We don't make very big contributions and the AMA can't possibly make enough noise.

Automated railroads are what I would like to see. Separating commercial and non-commercial traffic would significantly reduce highway congestion
 
I believe this to be very likely. Driver-less trucks are just on the horizon, as Paul pointed out there is to much financial incentive not to take advantage of the cost savings. Most east/west coast rail corridors are being hastily prepared for double stack load transportation so transportation options will be very competitive, driving down costs to the consumer and business. I believe the large east coast cities will be first to promote driver-less cars with in certain city zones, then the heavy traffic corridors (ie beltways), on both the east and west coasts will be next. It is just a matter of time before we (motorcyclists) are deemed a hazard to the smooth computer controlled traffic flow's and seen as a threat to the driver-less industries due to law suits and bad publicity because of their malfunctioning equipment, and no longer allowed within these areas, of course for our own "safety". In a society that values "safety" over freedom, it's a battle that will not be won, it's just a matter of time, two generations at the most near as I can see, given the advance's in technology and decline in the personal sense of adventure. In my early 50's too am to old to care much, I'll be able to live my life doing pretty much as I wish, my grand children will see large changes, not that it will impact their lifestyle as the way they've been raised, these things will improve their outlook and simplify their lives. They have no interest in loud, fast, (perceived as dangerous) things or camping in the dirty outdoors. By the time they have children my adventures and life style will look like a caveman.

As for an electric motorcycle, I'm on-board as soon as they make one that I can do 1,000 miles per day without stopping for a re-charge.
 
As for an electric motorcycle, I'm on-board as soon as they make one that I can do 1,000 miles per day without stopping for a re-charge.

Will every motel parking space have a charging station? Until that happens I don't see electric vehicles catching on.

I visited a new casino in New York - the del Lago. There were charging stations in the parking lot...but were for Tesla cars only: dumb. I just don't foresee electric vehicles becoming practical any time soon, and I mean decades.

Harry
 
I believe this to be very likely. Driver-less trucks are just on the horizon, as Paul pointed out there is to much financial incentive not to take advantage of the cost savings. Most east/west coast rail corridors are being hastily prepared for double stack load transportation so transportation options will be very competitive, driving down costs to the consumer and business. I believe the large east coast cities will be first to promote driver-less cars with in certain city zones, then the heavy traffic corridors (ie beltways), on both the east and west coasts will be next. It is just a matter of time before we (motorcyclists) are deemed a hazard to the smooth computer controlled traffic flow's and seen as a threat to the driver-less industries due to law suits and bad publicity because of their malfunctioning equipment, and no longer allowed within these areas, of course for our own "safety". In a society that values "safety" over freedom, it's a battle that will not be won, it's just a matter of time, two generations at the most near as I can see, given the advance's in technology and decline in the personal sense of adventure. In my early 50's too am to old to care much, I'll be able to live my life doing pretty much as I wish, my grand children will see large changes, not that it will impact their lifestyle as the way they've been raised, these things will improve their outlook and simplify their lives. They have no interest in loud, fast, (perceived as dangerous) things or camping in the dirty outdoors. By the time they have children my adventures and life style will look like a caveman.

As for an electric motorcycle, I'm on-board as soon as they make one that I can do 1,000 miles per day without stopping for a re-charge.

Considering the lack of support for funding, any transport changes will be bigger vehicles on the same public funded roads with lower operator manpower costs (either technology or lower wages). IMHO, safety is a minor consideration in all of this. It's purely economics.
 
I agree with the underlying facts the futurist OP uses but am not at all certain about how it plays out. At the same time I don’t buy into the doom and gloom for the motorcycling future. My entire life has been spent dinging around with ICE motorcycles and cars. My skill set falls apart when it comes to things electrical. I have taken test rides on Zero motorcycles and H-D’s electric prototype. The former was too small for my comfort. The H-D had the size and heft of a “real motorcycle” but with a rumored range of 30 miles is a total non starter. All sorts of xenophobic arguments can be made that stunt or kill development this range of vehicles in the US. We may find ourselves following instead of leading. Yet, I am kind of excited about what the future will hold once battery life and charging station infrastructure matures.

In the short run we may be missing the biggest potential benefit for motorcyclists in this discussion - AI cars that see motorcycles. BMW has been touting their drive for rider safety for much of this decade. More to the point here, BMW and other manufacturers have been working on Car - X communications. Fill in the blank for X and it could be Car - Car, Car - to various road assists, and more importantly for us Car - Motorcycle. This aspect of the digital future may allow for intentional and unintentional driverless cars but the car will be aware of us and react.

Vanilla may be a color option for the motorcycle of the future but it will not be coloring a monolithic generic ride model line. Starting with BMW’s concept eScooter followed leading to the C-evloution they and other manufactures have been working on e-scooters targeted at urban commuting and short range travel. BMW’s latest concept iteration of this thought will be show at Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este 2017. This is where I see rider growth when battery charge life and recharging times improve. This is also the type of rider and riding where self balancing and all the other things we are decrying make sense.

If scooters fall on the bland vanilla side “heavyweight” e-motorcycles could be entirely different. The +500cc range of motorcycles has always been the sports cars of the motorcycling world. This isn’t likely to change. BMW teased the eRR as a glimpse of where e-performance bikes might go. Zero and other manufacturers have been working on dual and off road variants of their street focused e-motorcycles. I may not have the garage skills to do much with these kinds of motorcycles but I don’t think riding them will be anywhere near as boring as the doom and gloom pry the throttle from my cold dead hand crowd suggest. Different yes. Boring? I don’t think so.
 
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