Here at JCT600, we’ve always got one eye on the future. Today, have come a long way with advancements in technology making them a more viable option for everyday consumers. From longer battery ranges and faster charging times to AI-controlled infotainment systems and autonomous features, electric cars are becoming increasingly practical and efficient.
Within the next decade, Britain’s roads could begin looking very different. But what about 70 years from now? how might the motoring world have changed? We spoke to fivetravel and technology experts to get their predictions, so come with us on a journey into the future. We originally provided our predictions in 2016, here we review whether they still stand in 2023.
Scott Frank, Airbiquity
There will be some major changes over the next 70 years. Fully autonomous and connected vehicles will become the norm, as ‘smart cities’ become a reality. By then, the car will have transformed into essentially a moving room on wheels, allowing the user to experience and stay connected with everything they would at home, in their vehicle. This means the vehicle is fully connected to the user’s home and mobile ecosystems, allowing them to watch their favourite films and TV shows, check in on their heating and home security, or even just take a nap, all whilst travelling in their car.
Joseph Nagle, EverCharge
By 2086 electric vehicles will dominate the market and gas power will be banned. All cars will be able to communicate with each other; every car will know the status of all other vehicles in the immediate vicinity, with visibility of what they will do next. This will bring about a massive reduction in road accidents, as well as speeding up journey times.
Roads will need to be overhauled as self-driving electric cars will require better infrastructure. Roadway markings may send signals to vehicles about conditions, or upcoming hazards. Charging infrastructure will not be built into roadways due to high implementation costs; rather, many homes and parking areas will have charging stations built-in as range on EVs will grow well beyond the 300+ mile range we’re used to today.
Steven Hausman, Hausman Technology
In the year 2086, driving will have been transformed radically in many ways. Propulsion will be virtually all-electric as a result of several changes. Battery technology will have advanced to such a point that an indefinite number of charges will be the norm with no degradation of battery life. In addition, battery capacity will have increased to the point that the only limit on the length of your trip is how long you can stand being in a car. Trips of 1,000 miles will likely be possible without the need to recharge, but rapid charging stations will be ubiquitous nonetheless. Current recharging times at high-capacity public charging stations are 30 minutes. By 2086, charging will take no more time than it does to refuel a petrol vehicle now.
Tim Newhouse, PetrolPrices.com
When the UK population reaches 83,882,000 in 2061, total gridlock brings in bipartisan political support for car rationing. The gridlock is so bad that many lorries carrying fresh food cannot get to supermarkets before their food goes off.
Under the desperately needed policy, the Government doubles fuel tax, no more money is spent on roads, and the tax on new-car sales is tripled. The Government immediately uses the projected proceeds and savings to start a buyback-and-destroy vehicle scheme. Any household that accepts a buyback must remain car-free for at least 10 years or else pay the money back to the Government.
By 2086, with the UK population now at 92,856,000, the number of cars in the UK has thankfully fallen to the level of 2016 at 31.7 million vehicles.
With an extra 10 million households being built in the 70 years since 2016, there is far less space for roads and cars, but at least the total gridlock of 2061 has been replaced by a slow-moving procession of traffic in 2086.
Daniel Colaianni, VR Bound
The future of motoring will actually be even more different than you think. Yes, we may well have autonomous cars and solar-powered roads, but virtual reality will also play a large and influential role in transportation.
With VR, you can travel halfway across the world in the blink of an eye, without even having to leave your living room. This will completely change the landscape when it comes to transport. What’s great about this is that in the near future this will be available to everyone, especially with more and more affordable headsets being released.
Nobody can say for sure what the future of motoring holds in store, but in many of our lifetimes, it’s likely that we’ll see self-driving cars become the norm, with electric power replacing fossil fuels completely, and a new generation of connected cities helping to make motoring safer and more seamless for all.
As for the government cracking down on car ownership in the second half of the century, it’s certainly an intriguing picture that Tim Newhouse paints, but there’s every chance that improvements in infrastructure will negate the need for any such draconian measures. Indeed, supermarkets as we know them may well no longer exist 70 years from now, in the era of autonomous vehicles and delivery drones.
And whilst there’s no doubting that virtual reality tech will become increasingly mainstream over the coming decades, and increasingly a part of everyday life, we’ll let you decide whether you’d rather take that epic road trip for real.
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