| > Couldn't one argue that there is not that much engineering needed to keep producing emergency vehicles that we already have And what you would do when the necessary knowledge would be lost? 'It wouldn't be' you want to say? But who would want to spend an entire life for doing things what would be replaced like once in a decade? > It's not like an ambulance fundamentally changes every year. Not every year but modern ambulance and the one from 30 years are quite a different things, despite they are both just box on wheels and a stretcher. > Would each unit be more expensive without mass production? Most likely, but... it's not like firefighter trucks are mass-produced for people who use them to go to work But ambulances are produced on the chassis of the common (and cheap) designs which are mass-produced for all other markets and sectors. If your idea of firetruck is American behemoths then sure, they are not like firetrucks in other countries which just use... the common chassis from the cargo trucks. Yes, they are deeply overhauled, but the main benefit is what they get that chassis and parts cheap because they are mass-produced. And if they are not - they are no longer cheap. > Military equipment is typically much more expensive than consumer products, but still... it's there. And just like American firetrucks they share a lot of parts (and means of production) with their civilian counterparts. And by the way, ambulances and firetrucks, good. What about delivering a new AC unit to you? It's no longer 40 minutes on the highway from the warehouse. It's a multiday affair and hours and hours of manual labor. Do you expect to still pay $20 for that? |
I see it this way: our society is built upon abundant energy, which is mostly (and by far) fossil fuels. Yes, renewable grow fast (while still being marginal), but they grow fast in a world of abundant fossil fuels. Cut the fossil fuels entirely today, and we are dead.
The thing is: fossil fuels are not unlimited; in the close future, we will have passed the peak of production for all of them (conventional peak oil was in 2008, Europe feels it since then). So we are going towards a world with less fossil energy, and we don't have a solution to replace it (we can hope for technological breakthroughs, but we just don't have the solution today). Hence it seems pretty reasonable to think that we will have less energy in the future. And therefore, we need to do less, and it will be more costly.
That's not necessarily the end of the world, that's just different (though probably more complicated).
> Do you expect to still pay $20 for that?
No. I expect to have to do less with less. I am not saying that I will necessarily live better, just that my survival depends on my society being able to do it.