tyred said:A surprising amount of bikes (and shopping trolleys) seem to end up in the river in this town.
gavintc said:Sadly, I think the elasticity of demand is such that people will continue to pay for fuel and will cut back on lots of other things first.
How cool.Brains said:A suprising amount end up in North Korea!
It may not be so common on this side of the world, but any ship leaving Japan, China, Indonesia etc bound for North Korea often has the deck covered in thousands of second hand bikes.
One of the ways the US drones recognise the final port of call of many ships is by simply looking at the deck cargo.
One way the US could bring N.Korea to the negotiation table would be to stop the importation and production of puncture repair kits!
Brains said:A suprising amount end up in North Korea!
It may not be so common on this side of the world, but any ship leaving Japan, China, Indonesia etc bound for North Korea often has the deck covered in thousands of second hand bikes.
One of the ways the US drones recognise the final port of call of many ships is by simply looking at the deck cargo.
One way the US could bring N.Korea to the negotiation table would be to stop the importation and production of puncture repair kits!