I wonder if anyone also has ran the numbers on the energy efficiency of these hyperloops. It's one of the first big claims on wikipedia. I've collected a few numbers of energy efficiency of various travel methods. Listed below:
- Walking: 22MJ/100km/person[1]
- Cycling: 11MJ/100km/person[1]
- E-bike: 12MJ/100km/person[1]
- Petrol car (5L/100km), 171MJ/100km[3]
- 1 passenger: 171MJ/100km/person
- 2 passengers: 85.5MJ/100km/person
- 4 passengers: 42.8MJ/100km/person
- Electric car (152Wh/km), 54.8MJ/100km[4]
- 1 passenger: 54.8MJ/100km/person
- 2 passengers: 27.4MJ/100km/person
- 4 passengers: 13.9MJ/100km/person
- Airplane regional (<1000km): Airbus A320, 2.25L/100km/person[2] -> 79MJ/100km/person[3]
- Airplane long-haul (10000km): Airbus A350, 2.39L/100km/person[2] -> 83.7MJ/100km/person[3]
- Train: depends on terrain and speed, but can be as low as 7.7MJ/100km/person[1]
So train looks to be pretty good. In fact, airplane and car seems so much worse that's pretty easy to beat.. (To be honest I was surprised that a petrol car and modern airplanes were this close)
Unfortunately, this does not account for infrastructure cost (train tracks, highways, airports, etc.) and vehicle costs.
And that's the point I've trouble finding accurate information about on hyperloops. How much metal or plastics is needed per km of track, and how does this compare to other infrastructure? How much quiescent power is there to create a low-pressure environment in the loop? How much energy does it cost to move the pods? Is it even practical, large-scale for thousands of km's, to build a tube with >2 meter diameter for such a low pressure? (Wall thickness scales with tube diameter) It's significantly bigger than for example oil or gas tubing, although those will have to deal with far greater pressure differences.
I really do question if there isn't an excessive amount of "energy" (= CO
2 release) required for the construction of these hyperloop tubes. Just comparing these hyperloops to existing train tracks, it seems like it requires a significant amount of additional infrastructure to build them. Virgin's site states very nicely there are no "direct emissions". That's great and all, but designing mega wind turbines becomes trivial if you have unlimited steel to play with. That doesn't mean that such a wind turbine net effect on the environment is positive.
Although the concept is cool and very futuristic, I'm yet to be convinced that this is an actual step forward to travel long distances more environment friendly. Or, perhaps worse, since it wants to compete with airplane travel times, facilitating long travel even more to the point that user patterns of energy consumption is far worse than the technology we use.
I'm not sure if SF to LA ticket would cost 25$.. It doesn't seem a sustainable price to me. If anything, marketing the hyperloop as the big step in future energy efficient travel
while offering faster travel times seems so counter-intuitive too me. I'm not saying I'm unhappy with capitalism, but the fast travel claim just is that IMO.
[1]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_efficiency_in_transport[2]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuel_economy_in_aircraft[3]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_density[4]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_car_EPA_fuel_economy