dcbwhaley wrote:
Steve. For all your detailed arithmetic the fact remains that most casual cyclists - or other exercises - don't increase their food consumption in direct proportion to the miles they do. I certainly don't. Some days I walk twenty miles, some days I cycle a bit, other days I drive, other days I am entirely sedentary. But I always have the same three meals. So I think that that aspect of cycling not being green is a canard
A pound weight is equivalent to around 3500 calories, which is also roughly the amount burned off by walking 35 miles (rule of thumb, 1 mile = 100 calories)
So you can probably cycle a fair old distance on the energy provided by an extra few hundred calories a day, and if you stopped cycling and carried on eating the same, you'd probably put on weight at the rate of roughly a couple of pounds per month - you probably wouldn't really notice for about a year, unless you were very skinny to start with.
The point is, that extra few hundred calories a day might not be noticeable to you, but when multiplied by the population it amounts to a hell of a lot more food.
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I will give some credence to the suggestion that obstructing free flowing traffic increases energy consumption but that is largely down to the design of car engines. The fact that small cars are designed to most efficient at 50-60mph when they spend most of their life pottering around at under 20mph seems rather odd. A marketing rather than an engineering decision?
Engine efficiency doesn't really come into it, and in any case it isn't really affected by vehicle speeds (a small, high-revving engine might have a narrow torque band and so be somewhat dependent on rpm). 55mph is the standard speed adopted (by the EU and others) at which to test fuel efficiency, so that's what manufacturers work to - doesn't matter if the fuel consumption is lousy at all other speeds
When it comes to fuel consumption, a lighter car is better than a heavier one in stop-start conditions, but under steady speed conditions weight doesn't come into it, and aerodynamics start having a lot of say.