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Petrol price pushes 4WDs off the road
Sydney Morning Herald
Fewer new four-wheel-drive passenger vehicles were registered in Sydney during the first half of this year than in the same period in 2004, as a result of higher petrol prices.
The Roads and Traffic Authority recorded 14,330 new registrations over the period, compared with 16,817 a year earlier. In June there were 2511 new registrations, compared with 3162 in June 2004.
Car dealers said high fuel prices had forced many owners of 4WD vehicles to sell them. "I've had people come to me and say, 'Look, I'm over driving this car and spending $100 on fuel. Get me something cheaper,' " said one northern beaches dealer, Mark Booth.
The owner of Cars Wanted, Andrew Nischler, said there had been a 20 per cent jump in people trading in 4WD vehicles this year. "There's definitely a heap of them going on the market," he said. "The prime reason is the price of fuel. There's just less people wanting them, period." ...
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LadyRuby wrote:I was just in the southeast on vacation. How can people LIVE there??!!! The heat/humidity was unbearable. It's not going to be fun for those people trying to do without all that air conditioning. On the other hand I guess they don't have to worry too much about heat in the winter. Northeast I guess has the worst of both.



AirlinePilot wrote:One gets a really special perspective on all this "inelasticity" when you fly over all these suburban hells. When you see a place like Los Angeles, or the greater Atlanta area, you just step back and shake your head. After becoming peak oil aware this has really struck me as a nightmare when I see the sprawl on such huge scales. One of the places which really sticks out is flying up and down the Northeast Corridor. Taking off from Boston headed for Atlanta the sea of suburbia doesn't end until you get south of the Washington DC area and into the eastern foothills of Appalachia. At night it really jumps out at you with what seems to be a continuos carpet of bright light. Those traffic jams in Atlanta are particularly noticeable as ribbons of white and red as you see the stopped streams of thousands of idling, crawling cars, most with single drivers in them
We got a LOT of work to do and little time left to do it.

LadyRuby wrote:MD wrote:Atlanta is screwed
LA is screwed
Boston is screwed
Tampa is screwed
Miami is screwed
Phoenix is BIG TIME screwed
Las Vegas is a screwed sewer
Houston is screwed
New Orleans is a FLOOD ZONE
NY is actually not quite as bad, but is still screwed
I was just in the southeast on vacation. How can people LIVE there??!!! The heat/humidity was unbearable.



The sprawl was breath taking, the traffic horrendous and there is no easy fix for the problem. Major changes to our nations transportation system are going to have to start at full pace overnight just to make the problem not suck quite as bad.

MD wrote:Atlanta is screwed
LA is screwed
Boston is screwed
Tampa is screwed
Miami is screwed
Phoenix is BIG TIME screwed
Las Vegas is a screwed sewer
Houston is screwed
New Orleans is a FLOOD ZONE
NY is actually not quite as bad, but is still screwed



Could one of you numerate persons perhaps calculate the oil that could be saved by the two suggested trimmings?
Military halved, meat consumption down 75%








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