Geelong Advertiser

Tunnel will hurt wallets

$45 per week at peak hour: West Gate Tunnel toll costs revealed

- STORY: P5

GEELONG drivers will cough up about $45 a week if they want to get in and out of the Melbourne CBD using the West Gate Tunnel once the new road opens.

Drivers coming from Geelong and the western suburbs face a toll of about $5.64 if they use the new road to get to work between 7am and 9am on weekdays.

Outside of the morning rush — including to get home in the evening — they will pay about $3.52 per trip.

MOTORISTS will cough up about $45 a week if they want to get in and out of the Melbourne CBD using the West Gate Tunnel once the new road opens.

Drivers coming from Geelong and the western suburbs face a toll of about $5.64 if they use the new road to get to work between 7am and 9am on weekdays.

Outside of the morning rush — including to get home in the evening — they will pay about $3.52 per trip.

News Corp can reveal the size of the West Gate Tunnel road charges for the first time, based on a sweetheart deal with toll road giant Transurban that passed through state Parliament earlier this year.

Transurban is tipped to rake in $217 million in toll revenue from the long-awaited second river crossing in the year after it opens in 2022, and also has a generous tolling extension on its main cash cow CityLink.

Tolls for the road were first published in the West Gate Tunnel project agreement in 2015, with a minimum fee of $2.75 and a peak hour city access charge of $4.40. However, those tolls were subject to quarterly price hikes right up until the time the road opens.

Under the terms of the deal, prices climb by 4.25 per cent a year until 2029, and in line with inflation after that.

This means by the time the tunnel is ready to be driven through at the end of 2022, fees for using the road off-peak will soar to $3.52, and $5.64 during the morning peak.

The increases are linked to CityLink toll hikes, meaning motorists using the West Gate Tunnel will pay the same amount as those crossing the Bolte Bridge. This is to ensure drivers aren’t choosing between the two toll routes based on price, but by which has the best traffic flow.

The Andrews Government promises the project — including twin tunnels under Yarraville and four extra lanes on the West Gate Freeway — will slash travel times into the city by up to 20 minutes.

The West Gate Tunnel is expected to take 28,000 vehicles off the West Gate Bridge and 22,000 vehicles off the Bolte Bridge every day, while also removing 9000 trucks a day from local streets.

Opposition Leader Michael O’Brien questioned why the toll fees were rising before the West Gate Tunnel opened.

“Only Daniel Andrews and Transurban would set tolls for a road that hasn’t even been built. Their decision will ensure that Victorian motorists are forced to pay even more when the road finally opens,” Mr O’Brien said.

But project bosses argue toll prices are communicat­ed in today’s dollars to make them easily comparable to charges on other roads.

“The West Gate Tunnel will be tolled to help fund its constructi­on and balance demand on the freeway network,” a West Gate Tunnel Project spokeswoma­n said.

“Once complete it will save people 20 minutes coming from the west.”

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