devbolt
Well-known member
oilerlord said:SeanNelson said:Well if you go with that view then it means all the cars ever manufactured should still be on the road. At some point the car that you sell replaces someone else's older car, which in turn replaces another older car, etc. until the oldest one gets scrapped.
It's not really a "view", it's basic math. It baffles me that people attempt to spin a net positive to the environment when trading in their low mileage, 2-3 year old, fuel efficient car for a new, more efficient car. Their trade in ends up on the dealer's pre-owned lot, and is sold to and driven by the next owner. Again, and simply put, there are now two cars on the road. More cars on the road = more emissions, and since 2000, there are approximately 40 million more of them on the road contributing to climate change.
Compare that to drivers that hold onto their fuel efficient cars for at least 10 years or 100,000 miles. They extend a vehicle's life cycle instead of irresponsibly adding to the number of cars on the road. While that seems to be frowned upon these days, at least they subscribe to the environmental concept of reuse, renew, and recycle.
We tend to be the people who keep a car for as long as possible. Our Sienna minivan was 12 years-old and had 235K miles on it when we sold it to a friend. When I bought my 2012 Plug-in Prius, it replaced 7 year-old 2005 Prius with 163K miles. That car went to my son, who is still driving it at 240K miles, which was used to replace an old Saturn wagon that had died. And the 2005 Prius replaced a 1996 RAV4 that had over 150K miles on it.
While there may be 40 million more vehicles on the road than in 2000, the majority of those vehicles are way more fuel efficient. And there's the fact that while there are more cars on the road, it might be because there are more drivers on the road, or that some households have opted to add an additional car to the house, and kept an older vehicle for specific purpose and don't drive it that often.