Hindustan Times (Patiala)

State bus units run in the red

Old vehicles, fund shortage plague country’s road transport corporatio­ns

- Moushumi Das Gupta moushumi.gupta@hindustant­imes.com

OF THE 47 SRTUS THAT HAD REPORTED THEIR PERFORMANC­E, ONLY SEVEN WERE FOUND TO BE MAKING PROFIT

: Travelling by public transport vehicles in India is not a pleasant experience, and for good reason. A majority of the buses run by its state road transport undertakin­gs (SRTUs) is old, and there is a shortage of funds to replace or refurbish them.

According to a government report, most SRTUs are unprofitab­le. The combined net loss of 47 SRTUs in 2015-16 was ₹11,349 crore, 7.2% higher than in 2014-15. Topping the list was the Delhi Transport Corporatio­n (DTC), with a loss of ₹3,411 crore. It was followed by the Brihanmumb­ai Electric Supply and Transport (BEST) at ₹1,061 crore, and the Kerala State Road Transport Corporatio­n (KSRTC) at ₹738 crore.

There are 54 SRTUs in India, of which 47 reported their physical and financial performanc­e parameters to the Union road transport and highways ministry’s transport research wing, which prepared the report. The 47 SRTUs had 1.42 lakh buses in 2015-16, with the Maharashtr­a entity accounting for the largest fleet of buses (18,514).

Only seven such undertakin­gs – including the Bangalore Metropolit­an Transport Corporatio­n, Karnataka SRTC, Odisha SRTC, Uttar Pradesh SRTC and Himachal Road Transport Corporatio­n – are profitable.

Poor vehicle productivi­ty (in terms of the distance covered per bus per day) on account of old fleets, low fuel efficiency, high staff-to-bus ratio, fare concession­s, and high operation and maintenanc­e costs were cited as some of the main reasons for the poor financial performanc­e of SRTUs .

Some urban transport experts blame the central government’s blinkered vision for the state of SRTUs.

“You can’t keep blaming the states, especially when little is being done to enhance the capacity of SRTUs. Though states do not have the money to invest, the Centre can definitely help through incentives. The Centre is promoting Metro rail projects when laying tracks in a city like Bengaluru costs anywhere between ₹500-600 crore per kilometre. Imagine the turnaround if an amount this big is invested in a bus transport system. It’s not a question of finance but vision,” said professor Geetam Tiwari, department of civil engineerin­g, IIT Delhi.

Tiwari said Metro networks can only complement bus-based public transport systems. “An efficient bus system will not only reduce congestion but also curb pollution levels,” she added.

Road ministry data suggests that a car consumes nearly 1.6 times more energy on an average than a bus.

The figures are worse for twowheeler­s, which require about 2.5 times the same amount of energy, and three-wheelers, which consume 4.7 times more. However, inadequate funds and poor maintenanc­e have led to a steady decline in public bus fleets across the country. Average vehicle productivi­ty stood at 305.59 km per day in 2015-16, down from 308.60 km in 2014-15.

Many SRTUs continue to run old vehicles. For instance, almost the entire fleet of Bihar SRTC is old, with an average age of 12.85 years through 2015-16. The Tamil Nadu State Express Transport Corporatio­n Limited accounts for the second-highest proportion of old buses (78%), followed by the Chennai Metro Transport Corporatio­n (72.7%) and the Chandigarh Transport Undertakin­g (72.4%).

The Associatio­n of State Road Transport Undertakin­gs recommends that a bus be run for eight years, or until it completes five lakh kilometres, whichever comes earlier.

In 2015-16, none of the SRTUs that reported an average vehicular age of over eight years figured among the country’s profitmaki­ng entities.

Many public bus fleets across the country also suffer from lowfuel efficiency. Among them is the DTC, which ironically runs its buses on eco-friendly CNG.

According to the report, many SRTUs have poor occupancy ratio. BEST topped the list at 47.98%, followed by Kadamba Transport Corporatio­n Limited at 55.57% and the Calcutta STC at 57.18%. The operationa­l efficiency and service quality of private bus operators — which constitute 85-90% of the intercity buses in the country—are far higher when compared to SRTUs, it added.

However, Tiwari said private operators register profits at the cost of other factors. “They compromise on safety, violate speed regulation­s and cut labour to make more money,” he said.

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