Los Angeles Times

Will robot cars worsen traffic?

Study says self-driving vehicles will increase congestion in urban cores but decrease it in suburbs

- By Ashley Halsey III Halsey writes for the Washington Post.

As the era of driverless cars looms, a new study out of Boston suggests the vehicles may increase traffic congestion in cities’ downtown areas as more people embrace ride-hailing services and abandon transit.

The same study also found, however, that driverless vehicles could dramatical­ly improve traffic conditions in the suburbs.

The study by the World Economic Forum and Boston Consulting Group is based on a simple premise, backed by 10 months of research and one of the most specific surveys done on autonomous cars: As the cost of using services such as Uber and Lyft falls because the companies no longer need to pay drivers, people who now take mass transit will instead opt for door-todoor service rather than the bus or subway.

“If it’s the same price or only slightly more, plus I don’t have to walk to the station, I don’t have to worry about carrying an umbrella, I don’t have to check schedules, I don’t have to connect, why would anyone take the train?” said Augustin Wegscheide­r, one of the report’s authors.

Why might that cause 5.5% more congestion in downtown Boston? Because ride-hailing fleet vehicles will begin to replace private cars.

“You might have fewer vehicles on the road, but the vehicles that are on the road are operating 12 hours a day,” Wegscheide­r said.

The study underscore­s, he said, “that unless you put the right policies in place to actively manage the adoption of [autonomous vehicles], congestion might actually get worse.”

The answer there, the study says, is that those policies must encourage people to share autonomous vehicles provided by ride-hailing companies.

“One of the answers is getting more people in the car,” Wegscheide­r said. “If you ask consumers, ‘Would you do that?’ they say, ‘Hell, no, I’m not going to share a car with strangers,’ but if it costs $2 instead of $7, they say, ‘OK.’ ”

The situation will be very different in most suburbs, the study found, where ridehailin­g services “will mainly replace the use of personal cars rather than mass transit, and travel time will decrease by 12.1%.”

“There, the trade-off is instead of sitting in traffic for a 10-mile trip and dealing with it myself and paying $30 for parking in the city every day, I could invest those $30 in the ride service and use the time productive­ly,” Wegscheide­r said.

And unlike city dwellers, suburban commuters who use mass transit are not expected to opt for a ride-hailing service even if the cost drops significan­tly.

“If I take the train for an hour now for $6, even if the Lyft price comes down from $80 to $40 [for the same trip], it’s still a trade-off between $40 and $6,” he said. “People will still ride the train.”

The study also found that the advent of autonomous cars has much broader acceptance in congested cities abroad than it does in the United States.

The report surveyed 5,500 drivers in 27 cities around the world, finding that slightly more than half of Americans said they want to ride in a driverless car. In two countries where the number of cars has skyrockete­d in recent years — China and India — 75% to 85% of people said they would welcome autonomous vehicles.

The difference, said Wegscheide­r, is that the United States has a much more establishe­d car culture.

“Some people would go from walking or mainly riding a bike to an autonomous vehicle,” he said, “rather than a person who grew up in the suburbs of Detroit who says, ‘I’ve been driving all my life.’ ”

Wegscheide­r says he is distrustfu­l of many surveys about whether people are ready to embrace driverless cars. “You can Google a study that says 80% of people are scared of [autonomous vehicles], and you can just as easily find a study that says 80% of people are excited about [autonomous vehicles]. I find neither of those mean anything,” he said.

“We tried to make it, in these very specific situations: ‘You’re going to work, it’s a 10-mile trip, you’re traveling by yourself at 7 a.m., it’s raining, you have these eight options at the following costs and the following trip experience. Which one do you take?’ ”

 ?? Angelo Merendino AFP/Getty Images ?? AS THE COST of ride-hailing services falls because they no longer need to pay drivers, people who now take the bus or subway will instead opt for door-to-door service. Above, an Uber self-driving car in Pittsburgh.
Angelo Merendino AFP/Getty Images AS THE COST of ride-hailing services falls because they no longer need to pay drivers, people who now take the bus or subway will instead opt for door-to-door service. Above, an Uber self-driving car in Pittsburgh.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States