• Dr. Moose
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        177 days ago

        Bet that semi trucks are more expensive due to road damage and congestion alone.

        • @mriguy@lemmy.world
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          97 days ago

          Yes, but that’s all subsidized by taxpayers, so it’s more expensive overall but cheaper for YOU.

        • @futatorius@lemm.ee
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          35 days ago

          I’ve already commented on road damage, but yeah, trucking firms bear no costs for the congestion and other road hazards they bring with them. Society, as is so often the case, sucks up those externalities.

          • Dr. Moose
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            5 days ago

            There’s definitely direct economic damage here too beyond just repairs and slowness. It’s sniffles business growth because the infrastructure is unreliable.

            Sometimes I just like yo imagine how much fun the roads would be without trucks.

          • @futatorius@lemm.ee
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            15 days ago

            Something like 70% of transport-related particulate emissions (and microplastics) are from tire wear.

    • Yggstyle
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      7 days ago

      *** everyone but the lobbyists liked that ***

      • @twopi@lemmy.ca
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        16 days ago

        Outside of mines or just in mines? I know that mines are becoming more automated but what about commercial routes.

    • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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      -47 days ago

      It’s absurd to suggest running a railway to every warehouse in East Bumfuck, Missouri.

          • @mriguy@lemmy.world
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            47 days ago

            A road built and maintained by taxpayers is much cheaper (to a shipping company) than building, maintaining, and operating a railway. Making taxpayers responsible for the infrastructure you use is one way to make your business much more profitable.

          • @deranger@sh.itjust.works
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            107 days ago

            Citation needed

            A cursory search shows rail in rural areas is $2 million per mile and a highway is $4-10 million per mile.

            • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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              -37 days ago

              Yeah but it’d be fucking insane to build a state highway to each and every destination in every hamlet, just like it would be for rail.

              And it’s not just cost of initial construction, it’s also cost of maintenance. If the ground shifts slightly under the road, it’s a bump. If it shifts under a railway, it’s a derailment for the first train that finds it and a couple million dollars in recovery and repair, plus the downtime while that section is out of service. And that doesn’t even start to account for overhead like signal operation, whereas on a road you just use a stop sign.

              I like trains more than the next guy, but you absolutely cannot just replace every road with a railway.

              • @twopi@lemmy.ca
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                16 days ago

                I think you’re missing the general point.

                In the cases you’ve described, having automated semis would not be feasible. Automated cars already have a hard time in San Fran and AZ cities with smooth asphalt as it is.

                The places where automated semis make the most sense, i.e. large, well maintained highways connecting large urban centres, can be better served with automated railways.

                The engineering is much simpler, fewer degrees of freedom and a much more constrained problem space (and hence constrained solution space), for automated railways than highways. Creating a safer environment for all. Also not having to deal with semis as an individual driver.

                Railways (funded through private investment): https://www.aar.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/AAR-Rail-Network-Map-2025-1.jpg.webp

                Highways (publicly owned, operated, maintained): https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/planning/images/nhs.pdf

                There is some good coverage with railroads, but as you said not nearly extensive as the public road network. But I bet you the vast majority (above 60%) are along corridors with railways. However two big hurdles need to be overcome, greater investment in throughput capacity and the fact that trucks can go from ware house to ware house.

                However both issues can be solved.

                • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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                  16 days ago

                  The places where automated semis make the most sense, i.e. large, well maintained highways connecting large urban centres, can be better served with automated railways.

                  On this I agree. For popular, well-defined routes, rail absolutely makes sense, not just for freight, but for passenger transport as well.

      • Dr. Moose
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        87 days ago

        No one’s claiming that. Trucks can still handle the last mile just like they do it with container ships.

        Im no logistics expert byt ship -> train -> semi sounds like a great infrastructure design especially now as the container is interchangeable between all of these mediums.