The Future of Transportation Seems To Be Avoiding a Central Question

If there is one single most important ability one takes away from business school, it’s the ability to conceive of the world in quadrants and to publish reports based on these perceptions.  You know what I mean:  Perhaps the Y-axis is affordability and the X-axis is functionality.   Only the dinosaurs are in the lower-left quadrants (unaffordable products with limited functionality); everyone wants his product to be placed in the upper right—as far up and as far to the right as possible. I’m sure I will not live to see the day that these representations (normally oversimplifications) fall out of favor.  Here’s one, offered by an analyst at Morgan Stanley, that attempts to summarize the auto industry and its movement in the direction of autonomous vehicles that are shared, rather than owned.   According to the analyst, the good stuff, as always, lies in the upper right quadrant, where in this case the asset (car, truck, taxi, etc.) is both shared and autonomous, making everything in all other quadrants obsolete.

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It’s hard to disagree with the claim that the lower left-hand quadrant, i.e., owned vehicles with human drivers, is in fact, rapidly becoming obsolete.  For those who may not have gotten the message intuitively, the analyst offered a few words of help:  “100-year-old model”; that’s never a cheery note on one of these graphics. In truth, I don’t deny that any of this is happening.  My only note is that, for some reason, we seem to be in such a hurry to replace the driver that, in my estimation, we’ve abandoned a concept that is much more important to our civilization: abandoning the (crude oil-based) fuel.  It’s a bit strange to me that no one is talking about the true cause of so much death, disease, and environmental devastation associated with transportation: our dependence on petroleum.

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2 comments on “The Future of Transportation Seems To Be Avoiding a Central Question
  1. garyt1963 says:

    It seems to me that shared autonomy will tend to drive vehicles in the direction of electricity.

    Why?

    1. It’s much easier to imagine an autonomous vehicle charging up without human intervention than pumping fossil fuels. (Induction chargers can be built into parking places, so no need to plug in).

    2. With shared vehicles, any capital cost premium is shared across more journeys, and subject to the batteries having sufficient durability, will result in a situation where electric vehicles are likely to outperform fossil fuel vehicles in economic terms.

    (Electric vehicles have high capital cost, and low O & M cost so the more the asset is used, the more competitive it becomes compared with a fossil fuel vehicle having lower capital cost and higher O & M.)

    It should also be noted that that shared vehicles reduce the number of vehicles on the road with all sorts of secondary savings in road and parking infrastructure.

  2. Absolutely right; good points.