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Subsections

Motivation




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``The racing stand still'' from the German magazin ``der Spiegel''.



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Capacity problems


  • Increasing individual mobility.

  • Urban sprawl.

  • Globalisation of markets.

  • Decentralization, out-sourcing.

Social problems


  • Safety, health and well-being.

  • High quality mobility not available to everybody.

  • Isolation.

The graph shows the total person km per year in the European union from 1970 to 1996 [1,2].

Reasons for Capacity problems:

Social problems:



Environmental problems

  • pollution

  • global warming

  • noise

  • waste

  • land-use

  • intersection of wildlife




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Here the accumulated amount of CO2 is shown with data from  [3]. For the global warming the total amount of CO2 in the air is decisive and not the production per year. However, even the CO2 production per year is expected to increase. The background image is an infra-red photography of the earth, which has been used to indicate an increase of the average earth temperature.



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Costs

  • costs of slow and unreliable transport.

  • medical costs.

  • insurance.

  • inefficient use of transport infrastructure and vehicles.

  • restoration of buildings.



Costs that are difficult to estimate:
(external costs)

  • reduction in the quality of life,

  • damage to the environment.

  • loss of arts and historic monuments.

The economic impact of the transport sector is usually underestimated in terms of direct contribution to the cross domestic product (approximately 3% in Germany [1]). However, the statistics above shows that an average German household spends more money on transport and communication than on food which account for 17% of all expenditures [4]. The reason for this difference is that the production of cars, petrol and car-insurances are not directly produced in the transport sector. Other indirect costs are

External costs are all costs that are caused ``outside'' the accounting of a particular transport system. Even though the existence of these cost are evident it is often difficult to determine the quantity of damage caused by traffic and the value of these damages. For example:

However, one can agree to prefer a transport system that is reducing these costs compared with the present alternatives.


Evolution or Revolution ?

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Can the problems be solved by introducing new technologies? How to apply Information technologies (ITs), automation or electrical engines to transportation systems?
Evolution:
These ``new'' technologies are applied to present transportation systems. However, cars are not very suitable for ITs, automatic control and electrical engines. The train on the other side is not suitable to respond to today's mobility demand and is in most cases not profitable.
Revolution:
A new transportation system is designed that incorporates perfectly ITs, automatic control and electrical engines and responds to today's mobility demand i.e. inherits the flexibility of a car.



Any new transportation scheme that is going to supersede a substantial proportion of the present transport systems must:

  • have a high problem solving potential.

  • be cheaper for users and profitable for operators and manufacturers.

  • be compatible with present transport infrastructure during a transient phase.






``science and technology do not develop seamlessly, but rather by major and painful changes in accepted wisdom$\ldots$
$\ldots$Such changes are preceded by a period of profound uncertainty as the accepted solutions become plainly unsatisfactory at solving the problems.''

Thomas Samuel Kuhn, Philosopher (1970)




Quotation from Thomas Kuhn: ``The Structure of Scientific Revolutions '' [5].


The new transportion paradigms



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The new paradigms are:

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