Oh dear ... I need a reality check because I actually agree with some of what Basingwerk wrote.
No matter where you'd like to set the boundaries of this discussion, Malthus will eventually apply because the World has only so many resources and they have to go around for everyone in four dimensions. The biggest problem the world faces today is human overpopulation. However, that's another discussion even though the increasing population is one reason for the increased demands on road-space, and so a contributory factor to the cost of motoring.
WRT the environmental impact of road transport, consider this. The main greenhouse gas emitted by road vehicles is carbon dioxide (CO2). Less than 6% of world-wide CO2 emmissions come from transport sources (which includes land, sea, and air transport). The UK produces less than 2% of global pollution, so UK road transport produces no more than one thousandth of one percent of global CO2. (Source, Stuart Beatty's analysis of the UN figures). To think that even something as drastic as closing the UK road network would have any significant effect on global warming is IMO somewhat foolish and arrogant. Given that taxing everyone off the roads would have no discernible effect worldwide, fuel tax must be all about feeding the coffers of the exchequer and the environmental argument is pretty much spin.
Having got that off my chest, I see the real issue as congestion. Our road network is inadequate after decades of neglect and something must be done or the country will rapidly grind to a halt. AFAICT, there are three ways to reduce congestion:
- Increase road capacity
- Reduce the number of vehicles
- Improve road-use balance (i.e. move journeys from the congested commuter routes to less-well-used roads)
I suspect that any solution must use a combination of these.
Increase road capacity
Build more roads. Include in that a supplementary toll system (like France) with a near-guaranteed level of service.
Reduce the safe inter-vehicle distance from the currently recommended two seconds in good conditions. Unfortunately, unless you improve response times, doing that leaves the system open to catastrophic reaction to minor changes. FWIW, inter-vehicle separation is already reduced below safety on congested roads and attempts to smooth flow (e.g. variable speed limits) only put off the onset of disruption and increase the likelihood of eventual reaction being catastrophic (long tail-backs or even multi-vehicle pile-ups). I suspect that to reduce inter-vehicle distances safely will require us to give up control of our vehicles because computers can communicate and react a lot faster than us.
Reduce the number of vehicles
Unfortunately, our masters seem intent on using only sticks and no carrots here. They seek to dissuade us from using our vehicles by obscene taxation. However, that policy is blatantly unfair because of the disproportionate affect it has on those who can least afford the tax but who most need their cars (e.g. agricultural workers who are the among the lowest paid and live where there is no viable public transport and often must drive many miles for food, medical care, schools etc.)
What is needed is safe, clean, and reliable alternatives to coax people out of their cars. FWIW, I've travelled both by bus and by train in the last month and I don't want to repeat the experience in a hurry. Both modes were smelly, overcrowded, and late. So, it's hardly surprising that I got back to using my car ASAP.
Also, consider that many journeys should be unnecessary. We have the technology to let most clerical and call-centre work be done from home. After all, most of big business can now farm this work out to India and save money, so "teleworking" should be financially sound. Instead of trying to tax people out of their cars, what if the Government gave additional tax benefits for teleworking? Take most office commuters off the road and provide decent school transport and you'll have cured most of this country's congestion at a stroke.
There are, of course, other ways of making some journeys unnecessary, e.g. providing incentives for on-line shopping and home deliveries.
Improve road-use balance
Give business financial incentives to decentralise. Yes, I know that London thinks it's the centre of the known universe, but it doesn't need to be so. Again, we have technology that should mean it's no longer necessary for everyone to be right next door to everyone else to be viable. Once decentralisation has taken hold, I suspect that the process will continue with little financial incentive from Government, but they have to offer a carrot to business to get the ball rolling.
Provide school bus pick-up points, particularly for rural dwellers. Instead of all those cars converging on one point (the school) they would converge on many points (the pick-up "stations") with much fewer vehicles then converging on the school. Persuade people they should use such a system by, if necessary, surrounding the schools with no-parking or resident-only permit zones.
Anyway, enough of my ramblings.