The Changing Face of Transportation: Implications and Opportunities
Without a doubt, transportation and
technology are inextricably linked. When Henry Ford revolutionized car
manufacturing by mass producing his Model T, he made automobiles more
affordable for the average person and opened up new possibilities in personal
transportation. This is turn led many Americans to move to the suburbs as they
were no longer restricted to public transit or walking to get places.
But the mass production of automobiles
didn’t just affect peoples’ transportation choices. It opened up new business
opportunities (e.g. gas stations) and irreversibly altered urban form with
highways and sprawling suburbs. Many people began to value single family homes
in residential communities far removed from the downtown core.
Today we are on the verge of yet another
massive shift in transportation. Like Ford’s Model T, technological changes in
transportation could bring about new business opportunities and alterations to
the urban form – indeed many of these shifts are already taking place.
This article will look at how
transportation is changing and where new business opportunities will likely
arise in the future.
The
Clean Revolution
The first major shift in transportation has
been brought about by a need to protect the environment. Aggregate emissions
from personal vehicles are at an all-time high and linked to rising greenhouse
gas emissions worldwide and climate change. Already emission standards have
been imposed on cars to lower their impacts on the environment, but many
suggest that personal transportation needs a complete overhaul.
Although the widespread adoption of
electric vehicles (EV) was relegated to the minds of science fiction writers 20
years, EV technology has vastly improved and most major automakers now have an
EV on the market. Although EVs are still a small percentage of all vehicles on
the road, their numbers have been growing every year.
Flexible
Transportation
Linked to concerns over the environment is
the idea of “flexible transportation”. Whereas 30 years ago middle class
Americans would prefer go places by car, nowadays many people value having a
variety of transportation options at their disposal.
Increasing numbers of people are choosing
to live in “new urban” communities that promote walking, biking, and
alternative transit forms. These communities are designed to link people to
various forms of transportation, so that they do not need to rely solely on
their personal vehicle.
Common features of these communities are
higher densities, mixed uses, and closer proximity to the city core.
Additionally, many of these communities are
tapping into the emerging EV market by installing EV charging stations.
Decentralization
of EV Charging Infrastructure
Finally, new forms of transportation,
particularly in the EV economy, have opened up new market opportunities due to
the decentralization of charging infrastructure. Unlike gas stations which
require large amounts of capital for construction, the necessary infrastructure
for charging up EVs is relatively inexpensive. Most areas can tap into the
electricity grid easily, and installing a charging station requires a
comparatively small investment of capital, time, and space.
As a result, the deployment of EV charging
infrastructure has become decentralized, wherein any business or retailer can
become involved. In fact, many charging stations have already popped up in such
places as sports stadiums, office buildings, parkades,
airports, and residential communities. Big companies such as Ikea and Walgreens
have even started installing EV charging stations at many of their stores.
Clearly these shifts in transportation are
presenting new economic opportunities for businesses looking to capitalize on
the emerging EV market and sustainability.
Conclusions
Changes in transportation have
wide-reaching implications for personal choices, individual values,
environmental sustainability, and urban form. And although environmentalists
would claim that transportation needs to change to promote sustainability, in
the end, it will be the economics that will make the most sense.
As EVs become cheaper and increasingly
common, more people will embrace them instead of the gas guzzling automobiles
of the 20th century. In turn, new business opportunities will emerge
to tap into this new economy, thus heralding the dawn of a new transportation
era.
Joseph Tohill is a freelance writer and online communications specialist for organizations in the sustainability sector. He has a B.A. in Interdisciplinary Studies from the University of British Columbia and spent most of his academic career studying sustainable urban development; namely the interdisciplinary relationship between built form and natural environment.
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