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Replacing our liquid-fuelled transport system with anything else will require a huge energy input (it takes as much energy to build a car as it will use in its lifetime) and a massive, sudden replacement of a fuel storage and distribution system that has so far grown organically to match demand over the last 150 years or so. Far more sensible to keep what works (the internal combustion engine and gas turbines) and make sustainable liquid fuels.
the aviation industry......shows little enthusiasm to address the problem.
…. with 100 passenger miles per US gallon at 500 mph as the starting point for scheduled jet services.
Trouble with the Prius is (a) it needs 1000 miles of tarmac or concrete to travel from Lands End to John o Groats (b) that concrete needs lights, drains, policing, repairs, and goes through lots of habitation (c) nobody I know has ever got more than 50 mpg (UK gallon, 37.5 mpUSG - comparable with a diesel car of the same size) from a Prius in real traffic and (d) it needs a major battery replacement after about 60,000 miles. The average occupancy of cars on the road is 1.2 occupants, not 4. Unlike the plane that only needs 2 miles of concrete (with lights and drains) for any journey, doesn't cause any congestion or accidents in cities, and needs a major overhaul (not replacement) every 20,000 hours (1,000,000 miles). RB211 and similar engines are generally retired after about 2,500,000 miles on a precautionary basis, smaller piston engines (used for short journeys) are rebuilt, not scrapped, after 200,000 miles. If you reduce passenger comfort from airliner to car standard (no toilets, no galleys, no standing height, no overhead luggage, max hold cargo of one suitcase per passenger, no cabin crew) there is no contest in terms of fuel efficiency. per passenger mile.
Regarding fuel efficiency, cheap air travel has made extreme long distance travel possible for a large portion of the world's population. Much of the miles travelled are for recreational purposes, arguably not necessary for a healthy existence. In the world of instant communication one could argue that many air journeys are unnecessary, and consumption of fuel could be reduced enormously. We could of course say that many car journeys are unnecessary, and public transport should be used more
Regarding congestion, isn't it the case that aircraft already have to queue for long periods to land at major airports?
Hence the often stated requirements for more airports or additional runways.
If a significant number of road vehicle journeys were transferred to air travel, how would that affect the congestion situation? We may end up with requiring fewer roads, but far more runways.
In terms of climate change, given that aircraft can consume more than 100,000 litres of fuel in one flight, I think that the industry should be seen to be trying harder.
Would making climate change worse be an effective action?
500 people travelling 1000 miles in an A380 need 4 miles of runway, for about 10 minutes. 1 person travelling 1000 miles in a car needs 1000 miles of road, for 20 hours.
I can't get 100,000 liters of fuel into my plane. More like 150. The amount of fuel you burn is directly related to where you are going.
Flying small aircaft in the UK is horrendously expensive because about 80% of the fuel cost is tax, but it still works out about the same price as first-class rail travel for a single pilot in a 4-seater, and with 3 passengers it's comparable with the cheapest standard class rail travel, but much quicker and with no need to travel into a city. Car is indeed cheaper per mile but road mileage is between 1.2 and 1.4 times the point-to-point distance and journey times are about 3 times as long as private aircraft.
Anyway, back to the modified original question. If climate change is driven by carbon dioxide, the rate of change can be radically altered at no cost and with no change in anyone's standard of living, by abandoning meat farming, which contributes about 25% of anthropogenic carbon dioxide. If you want to improve standards of living, this can be done, again at no cost, by reducing the birthrate to less than replacement level.