Why on earth Should you drive 36 or 48 miles just for your groceries?
Deb, this won't effect you this year because big 20th century style private personal motoring is still in fashion, and entrapment in the aisles of a big shop is still in fashion.
The shop could have defined their prices to normally include delivery by a shared all-electric delivery van, which might go as slowly as a 20th century British milk float in order to go at the best-efficiency speed of electrics; below 30mph, and that does the drive for you. Because it is shared with the other houses it need not cost much per house to drop routine deliveries once per week at most of them. With the other shop scheduling helpfully, you'd get two food drops per week. With 21st century online shopping, you can choose by online picture any packaged food from the warehouse, plus download for your whole shopping list the nutrition and mineral stats summed for your whole purchase, various scope CO2 emmisions and other information, and you can easily check whether you've gone over your target for household CO_2e from food shopping. If you haven't, then you might want to choose to add a treat like chocolate cake or a beef joint. Whilst there are still a few fresh goods which are best hand picked in person, every single fresh item in my local Lidl including the fresh bread has been photographed for the till. That is, if I can buy it in person at a Lidl shop then I could see a picture just like that item on the internet from home.
Here is the real wizzo227 original :
The cost per mile of owning and running a large private motor vehicle which is parked or idle for as much of the time as usual, should be more than enough to buy and use your small personal transport and to also buy and use your share of the shop delivery infrastructure instead.
Next gain: suppose that both supermarkets no longer need three quarters of their car parks. What might be the land value of all that space, levelled and near to a shop, connected to a road drains and electrics, and what would you want built on 3/4 of a supermarket car park ?
Next gain: embedded CO2 of building your small personal transport and your share of the shop delivery EV should be much less than the embedded CO2 of a private personal motorwaycar.
Next gain: the sites 18 and 24 miles away need not space out and light shelves for maximum cross-selling distraction since you are not there. Input is pallets from the warehouse and output is household weekly, for which one two or three Standard boxes should suffice. Design for best efficiency least shelf space traverse by pickers sees less frequently bought item numbers further away from the most used areas, and some of the most popular items such as bread milk and potatoes can get amazon style xyz pickers to conveyor belt to an order assembly carousel. Imagine the baggage collection conveyer at the airport, and with lots of standard boxes going around on it, into which conveyer belts from pickers drop the right goods.
Ten minutes of operation of that picker assembler might load your box with goods which used to take you half an hour of trolley-pushing to go around collecting.
Next gain: Shop heating and lighting are no longer going to effect the mood of the shopper. Cooling like at the distribution centre might be better for food freshness.
Can anyone think of more advantages and disadvantages of ceasing to self-pick and self-deliver most of the routine food used at home ?