crs1026
Superstar
One of the big takeaways is that expanding into other cities isn't a significant technological challenge, but rather a challenge from the service and infrastructure side.
This supports the view that technology for autonomous vehicles is a solved problem which is demonstrated to work reliably, as seen with demo service in San Francisco and Pheonix.
He never said the technology is a "solved problem". He said the technology has been proven in a specific location where there has been intensive testing under low-load conditions. It will still need to be proven on a 24/7 basis.
Also, this means that we can't just ignore autonomous vehicles anymore. They will disrupt all forms of transport and we need to prepared. Most members of this forum will have likely either ridden in or at least seen a fully autonomous by 2030.
To elaborate on my previous point relating to the freight railways, as we will probably see the rollout of autonomous and electeic truck in the next few years, it will be important to manage their decline and try to stabilize them to ensure their continued existence in the future as autonomous trucks will result in severe losses in volumes for the railways.
I heard him say exactly the reverse. He said the challenge is getting to a "critical mass" ie profitability in a single dense region of use - sufficient chargers, and sufficient vehicles, to create enough market interest to secure committed repeat users. Executing a mass linear transport lane is the exact opposite. To disrupt intermodal rail, one would need to have created enough recharging capability over a longer haul for some proportion of the volume of traffic currently handled. Most existing intermodal business is over distances that will exceed the range of a single charge, even with improved batteries. Two or three chargers every couple hundred miles won't enable much market penetration.
But certainly I can see the terminal drayage in SFO being ready for AV's very soon. And next, I can see adding drayage centers at the other end of whatever route the containers are taking. That might open up the range of pickup and delivery that an existing intermodal hub can serve economically - ie generate more business for rail not less.
Remember, also, that the railways are also automating. Their economics are also improving.
- Paul