Delhi needs strong steps to free its traffic and air
the Railways in India. Kolkata got the metro in 1984. Delhi had to wait till 2002. The autos were never reliable and the city never had a system of flagging down taxis. Understandably, people found alternatives in private vehicles. And once they acquired them, not many were willing to switch back to public transport.
The result is that even with the country’s most extensive road network, Delhi has run out of space for its ever-growing fleet. It points to the disaster that is transport planning.
It is not that the authorities don’t know what is to do be done. The ideas are there. Some have even been implemented in fits and starts, but only to be given up just too soon.
The odd-even car restrictions were enforced to fight pollution for two weeks last January. But now, even as the Supreme Court has approved the graded response system to city’s air pollution problem, asking for road rationing to be enforced every time it hits the “severe” level, the government is dragging its feet.
The government also introduced its car-free-day programme in October 2015. Promised to be a regular feature, the move fizzled out too soon. As in the case of oddeven road rationing, the authorities couldn’t sustain the drive for the want of effective public transport.
With just 4,121 buses, the bus fleet size today is at a sixyear low. The Delhi government says it tried thrice to buy buses in the past two years but could not find suppliers. The June 2016 audit by the CAG blamed it on “frequent changes in the proposals, cancellation of tenders and retendering”.
To popularise bus travel, the government is planning to slash fares by 75% in the coming months. But discounts cannot get enough private vehicle owners to switch to DTC buses if the service does not ensure better coverage, frequency and punctuality. The DTC also needs to install display boards showing routes and timetables, something promised when the city hosted Commonwealth Games in 2010.
Similarly, the Metro needs to fix last-mile connectivity to ensure optimal utilisation of its network that will expand considerably by end of 2017. Besides, road pricing and congestion taxes have been on the agenda for a long time now. But before enforcing punitive measures, authorities must provide practical options.
Bolstering public transport as a realistic alternative demands substantial investment. Restraining movement of Delhi’s nearly ten million private vehicles requires political courage. With both its air and arteries almost at choking points, Delhi and its leadership can’t afford to dither.