How sharing the road is likely to transform American mobility
Increased passenger density and decreased vehicle footprint should bring strong growth for ridesharing in the decade ahead<br />
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Getting around is about to get a lot more interesting. The mobility sector could well undergo a major overhaul in the next ten years, significantly upsetting traditional elements of the transportation industry and accelerating the shift from purchasing (or leasing) a vehicle as a product to consuming mobility as a service.<br />
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Four essential innovations are rapidly redefining modern mobility: autonomous vehicles (AVs), connected cars, electric vehicles (EVs), and shared-mobility services. These technologies will likely converge¡ªthink autonomous, electric-powered robo-taxis¡ªand contribute to a new era of personal mobility (Exhibit 1).<br />
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When those technologies at last take hold, shared mobility¡ªdriven by fleets of autonomous robo-taxis¡ªcould generate the biggest slice of new revenues. That prize could amount to some $1.5-2.0 trillion in 2030. But while the dozen or so years until 2030 is not exactly a lifetime, it¡¯s still a long time, especially when the larger ridesharing companies continue to make significant billion-dollar investments each year and have not yet reached profitability.1 Currently, a rideshare driver¡¯s net income consumes half of the total fares collected, and he or she must book two to three rides of 5-6 miles in distance to net $14 to $15 per hour¡ªa pay level that¡¯s increasingly available for less demanding jobs in a tightening labor market. Driver retention is also one of the biggest costs in a rideshare company¡¯s profit-and-loss statement, and that cost can only go up.<br />
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Factor in that ridesharing currently only represents about 1 percent of US passenger-miles traveled (PMT) and that ridesharing¡¯s practicality decreases dramatically the further away from a city you happen to be, and one can understand the doubters. Is ridesharing destined to be confined to a small urban core? Investors might also fairly put the question another way: Just where is all the growth supposed to come from before the robo-taxis arrie?<br />
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15 Apr,2019