Congestion charging: It works!
28 January 2020 (Wellington): New Zealand can learn from international experiences showing congestion pricing systems can be successfully introduced – and with the support of the public, says a new report released today by The New Zealand Initiative.
Pricing Out Congestion: Experiences from abroad describes how cities around the world are turning to the decades of scientific research and empirical support on using congestion charging to manage chronic road overuse.
It can be done
The first
congestion pricing scheme was implemented in Singapore in
1975, and over the years has embraced evolving technology,
moving from a paper-based system to later this year,
launching its new satellite-based congestion pricing
technology.
Following the successful Singaporean experience, other cities followed suit with different variations of pricing schemes introduced in Durham (2002), London (2003), Dubai (2007), Valletta (2007), Stockholm (2007), Milan (2012) and Gothenburg (2013). New York City is also preparing to implement a congestion charge as early as 2021.
It works
Congestion pricing
works, with economists and transport experts agreeing that
congestion charging is the single most active way to reduce
overcrowded road use.
Recent advances in geolocation technology have reduced the barriers of costly congestion pricing infrastructure. And in New Zealand, the technology that is already being used to collect electronic road user charges on diesel-powered vehicles could be easily converted to charge for time and location.
Empirical studies show us that small charges equate to reduced travel times and traffic volumes. As a result, societies benefit from shorter, safer and more reliable commutes, higher levels of productivity and wages, and a valuable source of information for future transport investments.
The public will
support it
“International experience suggests
people really like congestion charging once they get used to
it and see the benefits,” said Dr Eric Crampton, Chief
Economist at the Initiative.
“Badly designed schemes aimed at raising revenue rather than curbing congestion can struggle to find support. Charges in better-designed schemes can be unpopular on day one, but in Stockholm, most people supported congestion charges two years after they were introduced, and support was higher than 60% in subsequent years.”
Looking at New Zealand, we can also see public support for the introduction of congestion pricing. In a 2017 survey conducted by the Automobile Association (AA), responses showed that two-thirds of Auckland drivers think, “the Government should consider charging tolls on congested roads to encourage people to avoid them at busy times.”
So why are we still
waiting?
Despite our major political parties
supporting congestion pricing, New Zealand will not see a
successful system launched unless the government of the day
is prepared to address the issue and take the time to come
up with a system that works for our specific landscape. And
as we head into an election year, 2020 is the perfect time
to act.
You can find a copy of Pricing Out Congestion: Experiences from abroad, attached at the bottom of this page.
You can read the first report in our transport series, The Price is Right: The road to a better transport system (November 2019), here.
ENDS