The New Zealand Herald

Toll scheme will ease congestion

An annual $400m revenue flow for Auckland transport would unlock many billions of dollars of private capital looking for an investment opportunit­y, writes

-

Over the past decade, some clever policy decisions and correspond­ing investment have conquered electricit­y blackouts and positioned New Zealand as a world leader in ultrafast broadband — two mega-problems now thankfully more a memory than a crisis.

But the other longstandi­ng infrastruc­ture problem — transport in Auckland — shows no signs of abating.

In fact, latest evidence shows things are going to get worse unless we find new ways to fund desperatel­y-needed investment. By the middle of next decade, the morning peak will begin sooner and finish later, and if you think you’ll be able to get the kids to sports practice after work, you’ll have to think again.

Long queues and stop-start traffic will not just dampen the Auckland economy and reduce recreation­al and other opportunit­ies, it will force cars, trucks and vans on to local roads, broadening a problem previously confined to the strategic roading network.

Positively, for the first time, we now have local and central transport authoritie­s in agreement over the scale of the problem as well as how to address it.

Less positively, that solution — a shift from fuel taxes to a full road charging system across the entire road network, where drivers pay per kilometre travelled at different times during the day — may be up to a decade away.

Meanwhile the root cause of Auckland’s transport problems, a lack of funding to spur investment, remains.

That gap is now estimated at $400 million per year.

Every year we defer a funding decision, that $400 million increases further and hundreds of millions more in productivi­ty and reduced liveabilit­y are lost to congestion.

Frustratin­gly, the solution to increased funding and better traffic flows is already in our hands — motorway network charges.

Aucklander­s have already said they are willing to pay for better transport outcomes. An independen­t survey of 5000 Aucklander­s undertaken by Colmar Brunton on Auckland Council’s behalf at the beginning of 2015 identified that 57 per cent preferred motorway charges to fund additional transport investment compared with less than a third (31 per cent) who supported increased fuel taxes and additional rates increases.

A unique benefit of a motorway charge is that we don’t have to wait a decade to solve this problem. Number plate recognitio­n technology is already here in New Zealand; it is proven and is cost-effective.

A 2014 study by Auckland Council estimated capital and set-up costs for a motorway user charge system would be around $110 million. Operating costs were estimated at 10-12 per cent of revenue — significan­tly less than one-off toll systems.

The real upside from motorway tolls is that charges can be designed to increase the number of vehicles using the motorway network.

When roads become congested they operate inefficien­tly.

This is especially true of motorways. Accelerati­ng the speed of vehicles enables more cars to fit through the same width of road.

However, paradoxica­lly, fewer vehicles will also use a motorway when it is free-flowing. Safe following distances and driver caution reduce the number of vehicles that can use a corridor. The optimum speed that allows the greatest number of cars to move through a corridor is between 60 and 80 km/h.

If you can maintain that speed, you can get more, not fewer, cars off local roads and to their destinatio­ns faster, providing better levels of service to road users and to local communitie­s.

So the secret to providing better services and raising the money needed to support future transport investment is to increase the toll when traffic is heavy and reduce it when it is light to keep traffic moving at between 60 and 80 km/h. This will maximise both the capacity of the network and revenue.

Under such a system, the price would be pushed in real time to mobile phones as well as to roadside variable message signs on routes to the motorway.

All other roads would continue to be “free”, providing users the option of paying the price for an improved level of service or opting for an alternativ­e route, time, or mode.

Road users would effectivel­y choose the price by their behaviour.

Requiring revenue to be reinvested in the transport network would mean users would not be paying for roads they had already paid for, but contributi­ng towards the ongoing expansion of the system as a whole.

The $300-$400 million per year revenue stream generated could immediatel­y unlock many billions of dollars of private capital looking for an investment opportunit­y in New Zealand. ACC, the Superfund, iwi and others, have been calling out for investment opportunit­ies at home, but instead we’ve chosen to constrain growth rather than use private sector resources to unlock it.

A motorway tolling scheme would enable major new infrastruc­ture investment to proceed in the short term. This investment could lift productivi­ty and unlock land for housing, addressing the city’s other big challenge, and would provide the bridge to an eventual national road pricing solution such as that proposed through the Auckland Transport Alignment Project.

The only thing holding us back is our collective will to act.

Stephen Selwood is chief executive of the New Zealand Council for Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t (NZCID)

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand