of unsold cars and they are being added to every day.
They have run out of space to park all of these brand new unsold cars and are having to buy acres and acres of land to store them.
It would be fair to say that it is becoming a mechanical epidemic of epic proportions.
If anybody from outer space is reading this webpage, we here on Earth have too many cars, why not come and buy a few hundred thousand of them for your own planet!
Below is shown just a few of the 57,000 cars (and growing) that await delivery from their home in the Port of Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.
The car industry would never sell these cars at massive reductions in their prices to get rid of them, no they still want every buck.
If they were to price these cars for a couple of thousand they would sell them.
However, nobody would then buy any expensive cars and then they would end up being unsold. It’s quite a pickle we have gotten ourselves into.
Below is shown an image of the Nissan test track. Only it is no longer being used, reason...there are too many unsold cars parked up on it!
The amount of cars keeps on piling up on it until its overflowing. Nissan then acquires more land to park up the cars, as they continue to come off the production line.
The car industry cannot stop making new cars because they would have to close their factories and lay off tens of thousands of employees.
This would further add to the recession. Also the domino effect would be catastrophic as steel manufactures would not sell their steel.
All the tens of thousands of places where car components are made would also be effected, indeed the world could come to a grinding halt.
Below is shown just a small area of a gigantic car park in Spain where tens of thousands of cars just sit and sunbathe all day.
Tens of thousands of cars are still being made every week but hardly any of them are being sold.
Nearly every household in developed countries already has a car or even two or three cars parked up on their driveway as it is.
Below is an image of thousands upon thousands of unsold cars parked up on a runway near St Petersburg in Russia.
They are all imported from Europe, they are all then parked up and they are all then left to rot. Consequently, the airport is now unusable for its original purpose.
The cycle of buying, using, buying using has been broken, it is now just a case of "using" with no buying.
Below is an image of thousands of unsold cars parked up on an disused runway at Upper Heyford airbase near Bicester in Oxfordshire.
They are seriously running out of space to store these cars.
It is a sorry state of affairs and there is no answer to it, solutions don't exist.
So the cars just keep on being manufactured and keep on adding to the millions of unsold cars already sitting redundant around the world.
As it is, there are more cars than there are people on the planet with an estimated 10 billion roadworthy cars in the world today.
We literally cannot make enough of them. Below are seen just a few of the thousands of Citroen's parked up at Corby in England.
They are being added to daily, imported from France but with nowhere else to go once they arrive.
So there they sit, brand spanking new cars, all with a couple of miles on the clock that was consummate with them being driven to their car parks.
Manufacturing more cars than can be sold is against all logic, logistics and economics but it continues day after day, week after week, month after month, year in year out.
Below, all nice and shiny but with nowhere to go. Red and white and black and silver, purple, pink and blue, all the colors of the rainbow and be they all brand new.
Indeed all the colors of the rainbow are down there on those cars, making pretty mosaics, montages of colour and still life.
Maybe that is all they will now ever be, surreal urban art of the techno production age.
Magnificent metal boxes, wasting space and saving grace, all sitting still, because its business at mill.
All around the world these cars just keep on piling up, there is no end in sight.
The economy shouts out quite loud that nobody has the money anymore to spend on anew car. The reason being that they are making their "old" cars go on a lot longer.
But we cannot stop making them, soon we will run out of space to park them. We are nearly running out of space to drive them that's for sure!
Below the cars mount up in the port of Valencia in Spain. They will not be exported as there is nowhere for them to go, so they just sit and rot in their colorful droves.
Gone are the days when the family would have a new car every year, they are now keeping what they have got.
It may be fair to say that some families still get a new car every year but its the majority that now do not.
The results are in these images, hundreds of thousands if not millions of cars around the world are driven from their factories, parked up and left.
Could we say that these cars have been left to rot!
Maybe, as these cars will certainly rot if they are not bought, driven and cared for.
It does not look like they will be sold any day soon, many of them have been standing for over 12 months or even longer and this is detrimental to the car.
Below, as far as the eye can see, right into the background, cars, cars and more cars. But what's beyond the horizon?
Have a guess...Yes that's right...even more cars! All brand new but with no homes to go to.
Do you think they will ever start giving them away, that may be the only radical solution.
Who knows, you could soon be getting a free car with every packet of cornflakes!.
When a car is left standing idle, all the oil sinks to the bottom of the sump, and then corrosion begins to set in on all the internal engine parts where the oil has drained away.
Cold corrosion is when condensation builds up in the cylinders and rust forms in the bores. The engines would then start to seize and would need to be professionally freed before they could be started.
Also the tires start to lose air and the batteries start to go flat, indeed the detrimental list goes on and on.
So the longer they sit there the worse it slowly becomes for them.
What is the answer to this? Well they need to be sold and that just isn't happening.
The epidemic is not improving, it is getting worse. Car manufacturers are constantly coming out with new models with the latest technology in them.
Hence prospective buyers of, for example, a new Citroen Xsara Picasso want the latest model, not last year’s model.
Hence all the unsold Citroen Xsara Picasso cars from the previous year will now have even lesser chance of being sold.
The problems then just keep on mounting up. In the end, the unsold cars that are say 2 years old will have no alternative but to be either crushed up, dismantled and/or their parts recycled.
Some car manufacturers moved their production over to China, General Motors and Cadillac are examples of this.
They are then shipped over in containers and unloaded at ports.
However they are now being told to put a big halt in their import into the U.S.A. as they just can't sell them in the quantities they would desire.
Consequently Chinese car parks are now filling up with brand new American cars.
Well nobody in China can afford them on their meager pittance wages, so there they will stay until our economy improves...which it might do in a few generations.
No comments:
Post a Comment