The argument that pedestrian deaths are cause by pedestrians being idiots is an interesting one. True to a degree, no doubt, but I think we can all agree that drivers can also be idiots. I had trouble tracking down a consistent stat but I see reports of 5M+ car accidents a year in the US and I expect that's believable. It stands to reason that I can be a pedestrian, generally following the rules, and get hit by a driver who is at fault. We recently had a cyclist struck and killed by a driver just down the street from me in this manner. And while these figures from the IIHS are relatively small I don't think there's any disputing that bigger cars are more likely to kill pedestrians and cyclists
"In the Michigan crashes, SUVs caused more serious injuries than cars when impacts occurred at greater than 19 miles per hour. At speeds of 20-39 mph, 3 out of 10 crashes with SUVs (30 percent) resulted in a pedestrian fatality, compared with 5 out of 22 for cars (23 percent). At 40 mph and higher, all three crashes with SUVs killed the pedestrian (100 percent), compared with 7 out of 13 crashes involving cars (54 percent). Below 20 miles per hour there was little difference between the outcomes, with pedestrians struck by either vehicle type tending to sustain minor injuries."
So if you're driving a larger vehicle, and you have an accident, and that accident involves me out on a run, I'm more likely to be killed. The good news is I don't have to run anymore but my Mother is going to be pissed. Maybe even my wife, too.
Safety aside I'm surprised no one has really brought up the environmental impact. This line from the guardian is a bit click-baity
"Almost 2,000 times more particle pollution is produced by tyre wear than is pumped out of the exhausts of modern cars, tests have shown."
The point remains, however. More tire wear is less good for the environment. Seems pretty logical. Now, I don't know how much faster an f150 goes through tires than a honda fit but I would imagine it's quite a bit. Not great.
Which brings me to my next point. EVs aren't going away. EVs are heavy. Bigger EVs are really heavy. The adoption of really big really heavy EVs is going to cause more tire wear, more pollution, and a way bigger impact to mine the materials batteries needed to move something like a 7,000lbs Rivian vs a 3,600lbs Bolt. So big SUVs now, and in the future, are going to be less environmentally friendly than smaller vehicles even with similar efficiency.
There's a time and place for big vehicles, maybe you need to tow a track car, maybe you need a pickup truck to deliver mulch every single day, I don't know and who the heck am I to tell you what to do? But it feels like if we all had a bit of introspection and drove a civic to work and simply rented a giant truck to do yard work once a year we, as a society, would be in a better place.
Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk