
So from 110 million cars in 2012 to 330 million cars in 2023. All these cars will have to be replaced every 15 years. And growth is not even slowing down

The graph contains ICE, BEV, PHEV and NEV (not a second BEV.). Visiting my Google friend finds this explanation for NEV:
Africa is the only major region in the world still above replacement rate in terms of population growth. So, lifestyle spending will be the more significant factor influencing resource depletion in the future. Also, the means by which modernization/affluence slows population growth is more related to girls who are educated choosing to live in cities and spend their money on musical theater tickets than on rural men buying their first truck. Similarly, the current trend in the U.S. is that single women are buying their own homes at higher rate than single men, and this will also likely further reduce birth rates, because single women who buy their own homes are less likely to marry due to the Core Cottage Effect, whereas single men who buy their own homes are more likely to marry, due to the Austen Plot Effect.Scott 2 wrote:I don't think it's clear whether the impact of this modernization is good or bad. Perhaps it will slow population growth, offsetting resource demands.
- Nancy HayesThe Shiny Little House
by Nancy M. Hayes
I wish, how I wish that I had a little house,
With a mat for the cat and a hole for a mouse,
And a clock going “tock” in a corner of the room,
And a kettle, and a cupboard, and a big birch broom.
To school in the morning the children off would run,
And I'd give them a kiss and a penny and a bun,
But directly they had gone from this little house of mine,
I'd clap my hands and snatch a cloth, and shine, shine, shine.
I'd shine all the knives, all the windows, and the floors,
All the grates, all the plates, all the handles on the doors,
Every fork, every spoon, every lid, and every tin,
Till everything was shining like a new bright pin.
At night, by the fire, when the children were in bed,
I'd sit and I'd knit, with a cap upon my head,
And the kettles and the saucepans they would shine, shine, shine,
In this tweeny little, cosy little house of mine!
"Fascinating Womanhood"- Helen Andelin 1965As you can see no mention is made of a husband (in above poem)...The tragedy is when, after she wins her husband, she reverts to the earlier dream. She now has her little cottage, children (or rescue dog, chickens, peonies and pumpkins), and the domestic comforts and joys she has looked forward to. Her husband has only been a means to an end.
-"Pride and Prejudice"It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.
You are not.Ego wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2025 10:52 pmI've never been in a Tesla or any other electric car sold in the US, so I can't really give an opinion on those, but I have been in two higher-end Chinese electric cars that were being used as taxis in Thailand. Both seemed to me to be very sleek automotive versions of Ikea furniture. On the (Repairable>>>><<<<Disposable) spectrum, I would guess they are close to disposable. I could be wrong.
Is this not the same sentiment which Japanese and later Korean cars were first met with in the West?Ego wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2025 10:52 pmI've never been in a Tesla or any other electric car sold in the US, so I can't really give an opinion on those, but I have been in two higher-end Chinese electric cars that were being used as taxis in Thailand. Both seemed to me to be very sleek automotive versions of Ikea furniture. On the (Repairable>>>><<<<Disposable) spectrum, I would guess they are close to disposable. I could be wrong.
Is that true though? A few years ago there were over 500 electric car companies in China and even now after significant market consolidation, there are still over 100 left with more than 50 local brands models for sale. Plus all the major European, Japanese and Korean manufacturers produce and sell in China. If anything I'd say there's probably less of a choice in the West since the car market is much more consolidated and dominated by the biggest handful of local companies.