Will All Cars Be Electric By 2025?
A Stanford economist has made some predictions that will send cold shivers up the spines of petrolheads around the world. If his bold prophecies about the North American car market are correct, then 95% of people in the U.S. won’t own a car; no petroleum-fueled vehicles will be on the road; and the global oil industry will be eviscerated.
And all of this will happen before 2030.
These are not the ramblings of of a doomsday prepper or a science-fiction author. These bold claims are being made by Tony Seba, an internationally-renowned economist and futurist from Stanford University. Mr. Seba is the leader of a project called RethinkX; which consists of a panel of international academics studying the market dynamics of the transportation sector. The 77-page RethinkX report predicts that the transportation industry as we know it will disappear within a few short years.
The report contains a lot of maths and goes into great detail about the widespread economic implications of electric vehicle ownership. It’s a long and thorough report that takes quite a bit of time to read, but the basics behind it are actually fairly simple and intuitive. The most important aspect of the report is centred around the concept of transport as a service (TaaS). Basically, TaaS refers to services that provide transport for individuals (e.g. public transit, taxis, Uber/Lyft, etc.)
Seba predicts that the cost of utilizing TaaS will fall to the point where it no longer makes economic sense to own a vehicle. Autonomous vehicles will play a critical role in this cost shift as it will eliminate the costs of hiring drivers, as well as provide people with the ability to be more productive in their commute. This surge in the value of TaaS will result in a collapse in the value of the private automobile, as it will cost more to buy and maintain a vehicle than it would to hire a car for transportation.
The ripple effects don’t stop there. RethinkX also predicts that the marginal costs of producing and running EVs will also fall such that petroleum-powered vehicles become economically unattractive. Once this happens, the demand for petroleum products in the transportation industry will all but disappear.
This sounds like devastating news for petrolheads, but the implications could be even worse for the economies of many regions of the world. For example, the Canadian province of Alberta relies heavily on its oil industry to sustain its economy. A collapse in the oil market would almost certainly devastate the large cities of Edmonton and Calgary (pictured); and could possibly disrupt the national economies of both Canada and the United States. These predictions seem to make common sense. The shock value of the RethinkX report comes from the time scale—it proposes that these changes will take place around 20 years sooner than previously thought.
Of course, these consequences beg the question of how accurate the RethinkX prophecy is. If the advancement of technology is as rapid as Tony Seba predicts, autonomous EVs and collective ride-sharing will theoretically optimal. I’m not quite as convinced, however, that the private automobile is going anywhere just yet.
There are a few reasons why I am skeptical of RethinkX. Owning a car has thus far been an immortal component of the American Dream, and I don’t see people being very willing to give up the emotional attachment to their own cars. People don’t make decisions purely based on economic efficiency. What’s more, there’s a certain amount of peace of mind associated simply with owning your own car. If your car has ever broken down and caused you to make alternative transportation arrangements, you’ll know exactly what I am talking about.
I am also skeptical of the report’s prediction that the industry will rapidly advance and squeeze the internal combustion engine out of the market. The corporations associated with the automotive industry are incredibly powerful, and I doubt very highly that they will go down without a fight. This is also true of the magnates of the oil industry, which include OPEC and the massive transnational corporations that produce and distribute petroleum products. The implications of international relationships with oil-producing nations would also be a massive challenge to overcome.
Finally, as mentioned above in one of my previous Ecarnomics blogs, one cannot ignore the impact of widespread EV usage on the electrical infrastructure. This concern is particularly obvious in developing nations in the global South, but cannot be ignored even in nations with the best power grids. It will probably never be known how such an increase in the demand for electricity will impact the electrical infrastructure; and the electricity market therein.
Despite the radical and potentially unrealistic view of the future that RethinkX gives us, I cannot dismiss the report outright. It could very well be right. The economics make an enticing case for a driverless future, no matter how absurd it seems to us petrolheads. Tony Seba’s report is incredibly important to understand, as it outlines the inevitable car culture of the future. Whether or not that future will arrive in 10 years or 40 years, however, remains to be seen.
An #ecarnomics post.
Comments
Well since my solar kit for litterararly any car so then maybe
I would love to see how they will manage against Finland’s winter!
I’d like to see how well all the sensors and stuff needed for autonomous stuff to work will function when they are fully covered in mud, snow and other crap cars get covered with during winter lol. And if even my phone starts lagging in -20 celsius temperatures how on earth will they keep all the electric stuff needed in autonomous EV cars working perfectly?
Lots of things need improving before this depressing future will become a reality lol
Lol you’ve made the most depressing post I’ve ever seen on CT. This made me feel sad :(
I think that this could very well happen in big cities, but not countryside. With that I’d be okay, driving in central areas of big cities is boring, so I wouldn’t mind having to use public transportation or autonomous cars.
Also if ICE owning becomes more expensive I could live with having to use EV as a daily, but if a day comes that it would be impossible to even own an ICE project/weekend car I may seriously be in a point I’ll have to rethink my hobbies lol
A great read! One of the things which I feel is forgotten so often is that the United States isn’t just LA, New York, and Chicago. There is so much area full of suburban and rural communities who will always be behind the major cities in technology, and really won’t have any other options available to them for transportation than owning their own vehicle. I feel pretty confident in saying that most larger-sized countries fit this description too.
I know where I live, I couldn’t get around at ALL without a car.
One word: No.
Do you see the sheer amount of 13+ year old vehicles on the road? The reason for that is money. People can’t afford to buy new, so all cars electric by 2030? I know mine won’t be.
And then the ride sharing. I for one hate public transportation. Because there always is some nasty person leaving their bodily fluids where they don’t belong. No thanks. I’d rather accumulate my own bodily fluids thankyouverymuch.
We’ve heard this all before; people have been saying this sort of thing since the late 80’s, when electric began their slow resurgence
The manufacturing cost of switching will be insane. You really want to go green and recycle, buy an old car
I have a better question: When will Kyle Ashdown stop giving himself the editor’s pick? 😂
He thinks people will stop buying cars, because they will stop making economic sense. By the same logic, people would never go on holiday, because that makes no economic sense either. This guy may be smart, but smart people can still be wrong