Well written, and respect is due. But you missed (or avoided) some of my points concerning the
near-term shake-up of the logistics and transportation industry.
My head is not in the sand, it's facing the impossibility of a
complete conversion in the near term.
As I said, there will be experiments, trials, media one-offs, maybe even some regional and local traffic lanes and delivery routes (where the truck returns to a domicile or 'home point' every day) that will be practical in some cases for electric and/or autonomous trucks, but my expectation is that eventually technology wont
replace truck drivers, but that it will likely shift some of them to other duties. The OP posted that truck drivers are 'worried'...I can assure you both, most of them are not.
If a young person of say 20 years old said they wanted to be a carreer truck driver (which never happens anyway) I would tell them to find and train for another related carreer, because they might face some employment hurdles in 10-30 years.
Pay and benefits are a constant issue, as are hours-of-service regulations, but a person with a CDL and a good employment record will have no problem finding work for the forseeable future.
But for the near term, (1 to 10 years or so) there are no worries at all for employable drivers.
My commments about the other duties that drivers have, was designed to help the readers understand that commercial drivers dont just hold the steering wheel....they have other work activities that are involved. Those other activities have to done by
someone.
Think about this: Even those fancy new self-driving Teslas, Google self-driving cars, Rivians and Chevy Bolts have to have
someone to plug them in to a charger, they cant even do that without a human to operate the charging cord.
Tire replacements, yard duties, vehicle inspections, brake servicing, hooking and unhooking trailers, loading and unloading, will all need to be done by
someone. Diesel truck
mechanics may eventually become less employable, but many of them will also transition to other related jobs in the transportation sector.
And the 'first and last mile' will be done by commercial drivers for a long time to come. Those pallets and boxes and packages dont just 'jump' off the delivery truck onto your porch or the EV manufacturer's dock, or into the back door of the taco stand or mom-and-pop hardware store.
Line-haul, dedicated, and regular-route truckload sectors COULD be electrified and automated IF our infrastructure was redesigned and upgraded to accomodate it. But P&D activities and irregular route trucking will still require a driver in that seat for a long time to come. In fact, as some freight tonnage is shifted to controlled EV lanes and routes, the opportunities for irregular route and wildcat independent drivers hauling 'ASAP' (hot loads) and just-in-time freight may even expand, all the while burning petroleum fuels and grinding gears.
But, I'm retired from that line of work, so either way, it wont affect my financial situation at all.