Business Standard

BIG CITIES TO RIDE ON SMALLER PEERS’ MOBILITY DRIVE

- MEGHA MANCHANDA

Smaller cities and non-metros are expected to drive the transport infrastruc­ture in the country with various municipal bodies across several tier-II and tier-III cities experiment­ing with transporta­tion models prevalent in London and Singapore.

Experts feel the traffic forecasts in smaller towns are easier as compared to metro cities and, therefore, such experiment­s can be undertaken easily. For instance, traffic in Mumbai and Delhi is far more erratic than Bhopal and Indore.

One such successful model is the Atal Indore City Transport Service, modelled on the pattern of London, Singapore, Cape Town and Bogota. Atal Indore City Transport Service, a government­funded special purpose, with an initial paid up equity of ~250 million being held by the Indore Municipal Corporatio­n and Indore Developmen­t Authority in equal proportion, is responsibl­e for running the local bus service.

Some of the bus operators in the city follow the dry lease model of the aviation industry, which means a leasing arrangemen­t, whereby the bus is provided on lease without crew or ground staff. The bus operators running operations with the Indore city transport include MA Travels, Caliber Travels, Nafees Travels, Serco and Priyadarsh­ini Transport.

Being a government enterprise, Atal Indore City Transport Service employs a competitiv­e bidding procedure for all its ventures. “When the transport service is the purchasing authority (for buses), it awards the contract to the lowest bidder, and when it is the licensing authority (for routes), it awards the contract to the highest bidder,” the city transporta­tion service said, replying to an e-mailed query by Business Standard.

The model has been adopted in Bhopal, Ujjain, Surat, Ahmedabad and Pune. “The model is worth trying provided there is complete clarity on the implementa­tion front. The contractua­l documents have to be written well and the municipal corporatio­ns adopting the model have to take it as partnershi­p,” Kushal Kumar Singh, partner, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu India LLP.

Singh said the city dwellers should be more acceptable of the new model and should not show reluctance in adopting it. The traffic projection­s should be meticulous­ly done before implementi­ng the new model, he added.

In the national capital, the Delhi Integrated Multi-Modal Transit System Ltd, a joint venture of Delhi government and IDFC, has adopted the cluster model

where one operator is given a cluster of routes for running buses. This works on gross cost contract, where a perkilomet­re fee is paid by the government to the operator who buys and runs the buses, the cost of which is calculated on a gross basis and not on one route. Under a net-cost contract the operator provides a specified service for a specified period and retains all revenue, the operator has to forecast both his costs and his revenues.

In Indore, on the other hand, buses are run on three types of contracts net cost model, gross cost model and Viability Gap Funding (VGF) — a grant provided to support infrastruc­ture projects that are economical­ly justified but fall short of financial viability.

Based on World Bank recommenda­tion note on ‘India's Transport Sector, The Challenges Ahead (2002)’, a private partnershi­p model of public transport system was conceptual­ised, Vivek Aggarwal, the collector and district magistrate, brought in the Indore transport scheme. Currently, Aggarwal is principal secretary, Urban Developmen­t, Madhya Pradesh.

The World Bank report had said that the cities with population of more than one million should have urban bus transport corporatio­n, which owns 30 per cent of its own buses and hires 70 per cent of buses from private contractor­s and operators.

The main source of revenue for the SPV is the monthly premium amount received from the bus operators, advertisin­g revenue and the share of revenue generated through passes.

The sources of revenue for the bus operators are the daily fare box collection, share of revenue generated through advertisin­g on buses and monthly passes.

The overall ridership in Indore is 150,000 passengers a day with the feeder bus network catering to 68,000 passengers. The current fleet size of Atal Indore City Transport Service is 354, which includes 65 CNG buses, 182 diesel buses in two categories (small and mid-sized) and 45 luxury air-conditione­d buses.

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