AJI wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 05:36
I'm just playing devil's advocate for what is inevitably coming… Maybe not in a decade, but there will definitely be a point where, for public safety reasons and for traffic flow reasons, humans will no longer be able to operate a vehicle that travels on public roads, which begs the question; why have the infrastructure for non-autonomous vehicles just to cater to the few who disagree with the implementation of AV?
(Since you are playing devils advocate)
By saying this you are implying that all non-av vehicle values become 0 as they cannot be used anymore.*
This becomes an issue as many people don't have the means to afford new transportation frequently. Many of these people need transportation and cannot rely on public transit. (Rural America for example). I know many people who cannot afford to spend more than 5-8k on a car. How long before you can get an AV for that much?
You can't just say - too bad you can't drive because you cannot afford a new car. (You could but that wouldnt go over well)
So the shift will have to take a long time and will only start to happen once nearly everyone thinks AV's are better drivers with no major trade-offs. I'm guessing a minimum of 15-20 years (two generations of owners) after AV's become cost effective enough to be afforded by the majority.
So, in short, I think there will only be 1 infrastructure in most places and it will have to be a shared infrastructure, because the transition period will not be short. Plus how is an AV better if it needs special infrastructure, where people navigate the roads just fine (with-in reason)? Infrastructure is expensive especially in large countries like the US, China, Russia, Canada, Mexico, etc.
*It would seem most likely the cost to retrofit will be more than an older vehicles value for quite a while. And of course excluding cars that are trackable.