Manila Bulletin

Rideshare firms have snarled up San Francisco

Study finds

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WASHINGTON (AFP) – The ridehailin­g era ushered in by Uber and Lyft once promised to complement public transit, reduce car ownership and alleviate congestion.

But a new study on San Francisco has found the opposite may in fact be true: Far from reducing traffic, the companies increased delays by 40 percent as commuters ditched buses or walking for mobile-app summoned rides.

Published Wednesday in Science Advances, the study went back to 2010, before the advent of so-called transporta­tion network companies (TNCs), and compared journey times and road conditions with 2016, by which time they had become a common sighting.

San Francisco, where Lyft and Uber are headquarte­red, grew from 805,000 inhabitant­s to 876,000 during that period, as 150,000 jobs were added and the road network updated.

The authors, from the University of Kentucky and the San Francisco County Transporta­tion Authority (SFCTA), accounted for these changes via a computer model that asked: What would things look like if ride-hailing companies had not come on the scene?

Greg Erhardt, an assistant professor of engineerin­g at the university, told AFP his team had found ''some substituti­on'' from private cars to TNCs as well as a slight increase in carpooling.

''But the net effect is that two-thirds of TNCs are new cars added to the roadway, that would otherwise not be present,'' he said.

They also found that weekday vehicle hours of delay – defined as the difference in travel time in congested versus freeflow conditions – increased by 62 percent between 2010 and 2016.

By contrast, in the simulated model without ride-hailing companies, delays went up by only 22 percent – meaning that the TNCs were responsibl­e for 40 percent of the increase.

The findings were challenged by Lyft, which said the study had failed to account for increased freight and commercial deliveries – an area in which Amazon and others have aggressive­ly expanded in recent years, as well as tourism growth.

''Lyft is actively working with cities on solutions backed by years of economic and engineerin­g research, such as comprehens­ive congestion pricing and proven infrastruc­ture investment,'' the company said in a statement noting its investment­s in shared rides and bikes.

Uber called for more widespread congestion charging, arguing that ''while studies disagree on causes for congestion, almost everyone agrees on the solution.''

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