Every few years, a Silicon Valley gig-economy company announces a “disruptive” innovation that looks a whole lot like a bus. Uber rolled out Smart Routes a decade ago, followed a short time later by the Lyft Shuttle of its biggest competitor. Even Elon Musk gave it a try in 2018 with the “urban loop system” that never quite materialized beyond the Vegas Strip. And does anyone remember Chariot?

Now it’s Uber’s turn again. The ride-hailing company recently announced Route Share, in which shuttles will travel dozens of fixed routes, with fixed stops, picking up passengers and dropping them off at fixed times. Amid the inevitable jokes about Silicon Valley once again discovering buses are serious questions about what this will mean for struggling transit systems, air quality, and congestion.

Five years ago, the Union of Concerned Scientists released a report that found ride-share services emit 69 percent mo

re planet-warming carbon dioxide and other pollutants than the trips they displace — largely because as many as 40 percent of the miles traveled by Uber and Lyft drivers are driven without a passenger, something called “deadheading.” That climate disadvantage decreases with pooled services like UberX Share — but it’s still not much greener than owning and driving a vehicle, the report noted, unless the car is electric.

Khosrowshahi insists Uber is “in competition with personal car ownership,” not public transportation. “Public transport is a teammate,” he told The Verge. But a study released last year by the University of California, Davis found that in three California cities, **over half of all ride-hailing trips didn’t replace personal cars, they replaced more sustainable modes of getting around, like walking, public transportation, and bicycling. **

https://archive.ph/xcnRy

  • Dave.@aussie.zone
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    2 days ago

    It’s super hard to resist public transit at higher prices

    It was 65 dollarydoos for a projected 25 minute uber home from Brisbane airport on Friday night.

    I took the train for 55 minutes instead. $22.30 of my train fare was for the 10 kilometre section that is privately owned by “Airtrain CityLink Limited”, the public owned section that took me the remaining 10km cost 50 cents.

    Fuck the corporations that want to try to replace public transport.

    • dormedas@lemmy.dormedas.com
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      2 days ago

      For now, these prices seem … “reasonable”

      Looking at it objectively your options were to:

      • Spend 1 hour going 20km for $22.80
      • Spend 1/2 hour going 20km for $65

      3x the price for 2x the speed isn’t wonderful, but it does have a niche. That is, assuming the speed is guaranteed (it’s not) and the price remains the same (it won’t).

      Of course, these axes I’ve provided also ignore the important distinction that the train probably transported a bunch of other people, too, and the Uber would not have.

      Also fuck that private section of the track, that’s horrible.

      • Dave.@aussie.zone
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        2 days ago

        Also fuck that private section of the track, that’s horrible.

        The rest of the train and bus network for a hundred kilometre radius is 50 cents.

        Previous state government in the late 90s “did a deal” with a private corporation to construct the line out the to airport and allow control for 35 years.

        10 more years of this shit and then it gets handed over to state government.

      • Dave.@aussie.zone
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        2 days ago

        It’s mainly because there are 15 stops along the way a couple of kilometres apart through the CBD, plus a 7 minute wait in the middle to change trains to another line.

        The trains are capable of 100 km/hr but basically through that area they get up to 40-60km/hr before having to slow for bends/switching tracks/the next stop.