Re: Why the future isn't all that bleak
He said that some of it goes via UPS and Fedex, which I presume includes ground shipping sometimes. Most big online shippers provide a variety of shipping options, air or ground, depending on one's price versus time preferences.
My guess is that online shopping, shipped via UPS and Fedex, is about as energy efficient as local store shopping if one chooses the 2 or 3 day ground shipping and orders in large enough quantity to make a single decent sized box. The boxes move in big trucks, automatically directed hither and yon, with just the last mile being done by a delivery truck that can make a stop every few minutes, probably using less petro on the portion of its trip specific to any one single delivery than a typical consumers trip to a local store.
For bulk common goods, like my years supply of toilet paper, rice and beans, the local big box store wins. For fresh farm goods, such as good raw milk, the local farm wins. For all manner of less common goods, shopping online wins, in variety, price and I claim efficiency (for sufficiently large or unusual orders.) The electricity bill of your local supermarket is not cheap either.
Originally posted by don
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My guess is that online shopping, shipped via UPS and Fedex, is about as energy efficient as local store shopping if one chooses the 2 or 3 day ground shipping and orders in large enough quantity to make a single decent sized box. The boxes move in big trucks, automatically directed hither and yon, with just the last mile being done by a delivery truck that can make a stop every few minutes, probably using less petro on the portion of its trip specific to any one single delivery than a typical consumers trip to a local store.
For bulk common goods, like my years supply of toilet paper, rice and beans, the local big box store wins. For fresh farm goods, such as good raw milk, the local farm wins. For all manner of less common goods, shopping online wins, in variety, price and I claim efficiency (for sufficiently large or unusual orders.) The electricity bill of your local supermarket is not cheap either.
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