No, distances are not much longer. A kilometer is the same length in the US as it is in Asia or Europe. It’s just that Americans have chosen to travel longer distances than Europeans or Asians have; they have chosen to settle far from their families. As travel costs increase, families will live closer together as they do elsewhere in the world, and move about less. Or else they will simply not see their extended families as much. Hopping from California to New Jersey for the Thanksgiving weekend will become a thing of the past.
This thread is about Petroleum and the Future of Civilization.
One alternative to the use of Petroleum (and its derivative, jet fuel) for transportation is the use of electricity to propel high speed trains.
In Europe and Japan they have substantially advanced trains such as the TGV in France and the “Bullet Train” in Japan
It is true that European miles (or kilometers) are the same as ours, but in the USA, we have many more of them.
Consider a few inconvenient facts with respect to distance:
London to Paris is about 215 miles.
London to Berlin is about 600 miles
In other words, World War II in western Europe ranged from London to Berlin, a distance of 600 miles. [Remember all those B-17’s in movies? Just 600 miles each way.]
In contrast, the distance from New York to Chicago is about 720 miles.
So, all of WW2 in Western Europe would have easily fit in one small corner of the United States.
Europe is small. The distances in Europe are much less than in the United States.
The distance between New York and Miami is 1300 miles; New York and Denver: 1800 miles.
If after traveling to Chicago and you needed to go further, you would find that Los Angeles was still another 2000 miles away. Pheonix is closer to Chicago … only 1800 miles.
In other words, the United States is a big country.
You’re not going to get very far very fast with trains, regardless of how they are powered. If you could average 100 mph with a train, travel would still take a long time. And much of our trackage outside the Boston-Washington Corridor is limited to much less than 100 mph.
In the United States you need airplanes to get around. Fancy trains have been talked about for many decades and apart from the Boston-Washington Corridor (450 miles) they haven’t worked out. In fact after decades of work, we have got the train speeds back up to where they were 100 years ago … 100 miles per hour. TGV or MAGLEV would be a hundred years away.
Yes, Europe doesn’t stop at Berlin. Europe is more than just France. But the distance from London to Moscow is only 1600 miles. Yes, the USA is a big country.
Distances are, in fact, much longer in the U.S.A.