Title: R. Prud
1 PARIS LIGHT TRAINIS THERE SOMETHING TO LEARN
FOR HOUSTON?
- R. Prudhomme (University Paris XII)
- M. Koning (University Panthéon-Sorbonne)
- P. Kopp (Panthéon-Sorbonne)
- Houston, May 18, 2008
2GEOGRAPHY
3(No Transcript)
4DAILY TRIPS IN PARIS AREA
Paris 2,2M P. C. 4 M G.C 4,8M
2 (23)
Paris
2,7 (58)
1,1 (63)
3 (63)
5,4 (22)
8,6 (10)
5THE TRAINS NAME IS T3
6POLITICAL CONTEXT
- Congestion, CO2
- Price versus quantity London toll, Paris, road
diet - Light train is a symbol of modernity.
- A political and mediatised success (mayor
re-elected and media love it) - Need for CBA
7T3s CONSEQUENCES
- T3 switch's riders from bus to light train
- Different groups of citizens are concerned
- PT users (T3, subway)
- Car users, on Maréchaux boulevard, radials,
ring road - We study the variations of their economical
surplus (welfare approach) - And the environmental impact (one of T3s
objectives ).
8WHO ARE THE USERS?
- Ex-bus (50) or subway (33) users.
- Low modal shift from cars (2,7)
- 144,000 bus tripskm before
- 256,000 train tripskm today (2,56 km in average
length) 100,000 users per day - Time gains and comfort gains
- Decrease mobilitys price and increase welfare
gains
9LIFE IS BETTER FOR TRAIN USERS
- Time gain. The average speed is now 20 km/h (
before 16 km/h) - Waiting time increased 0,5 minute
- The travel cost (in time) of a trip decrease by
0,438 min/riderskm - With a time value of 10,2 /h, the annual gains
is 4,47 M - Comfort gains. Tricky question (contingent
evaluation, willingness to pay for comfort) - Simplifying assumption comfort gains are in the
same order of magnitude than those of time (4,47
M)
10AND WORTH FOR CAR USERS
- Car traffic has fallen from 198,000 riderskm to
116,000 riders km (-82,000) - But Modal report Cars to T3 is low -7,000
riderskm - Did they disappear?
- Structural decrease (Paris public policy oil
prices increase) -10,000 riderskm - Real decrease in traffic 65 000 riderskm
(-36) - Where are the others?
11HERE THEY ARE!
- On the Ring Road Cost gap equal to the
roundabout way plus the waste of time necessary
to reach the ring road - Average length of trip on the boulevard 4 km
- Roundabout way 2400 m 800 m
- Average speed 20 km/h
- With these parameters
-
- ?cost 0,6 min/carkm 0,102 /riderkm
12A CLEAR PICTURE
Cost
Ob
Oa
B
PB
D
C
B
PB
PA
A
D
Trips
QB
QA
QC
Stay
Out
Switch
13COST CONSEQUENCES
- Shift to Ring road, QBQC55,000 riderskm
- Mobility decrease, QCQA10,000 riderskm
- Welfare decrease - 6,85 M / year
- Wastes of time on radials - 1,83 M
14RING ROAD CONGESTION
- More cars on the ring road means more congestion
- The traffic has increased of 55,000 riderskm/day
(42 300 tripskm/dayBC) - Debates on congestion costs in urban areas
- With INFRAS value (2,70 /riderskm), we find an
annual cost of 45,06 M. - We use Prudhomme-Suns model of congestion
(2000). It uses a disaggregated approach by
distinguishing congestion costs with respect to
the speed of displacement (Koning, 2008)
15RING ROAD COST OF CONGESTION
Speed (km/h) Distribution () Shift (vehkm) Cm(q) (/tripkm) Congestion costs (/day)
5ltxlt10 4,06 1 717 15,9 27,306
15ltxlt20 6,36 2 690 2,54 6,833
35ltxlt40 3,29 1 392 0,37 515
70ltxlt75 14,18 6 260 0,01 63 33.1M per year
16ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
- Two important relations
- - Number of cars and CO2 are correlated
- - CO2 emission is an inverse function of
speed under 50 km/h - Hence
- Suppression of buses (-)
- Modal report Cars/Train (-)
- Decrease car speed on Blv Maréchaux ()
- Decrease in car speed on RR ()
- Longer trips to access the BP ()
17CO2 EMISSION ON THE RING ROAD
- According to US Ministry of Energy
- If slt 50 km/h
- CO2 (kg/km) 0,624 0,00925s
- If sgt 50 km/h
- CO2 (kg/km) 0,16
- By crossing this relation with the speed-density
relation, we can deduce the marginal emission
on the ring road (function of density) - CO2M (kg/vehkm) 0,00231q
18BAD CO2 BALANCE
Before (tons) After (tons) Change (tons)
Bus Suppression 1,065 0 -1,065
Modal report 709 0 -709
Longer trips 0 1,114 1,114
Speed decrease on Bd Maréchaux 11,787 12,538 752
Speed decrease on RR 3,023
Total 3,115 0.1M
19 COSTS AND BENEFITS
Initially (M) Annual (M)
Investment -444,34
Functionning Nd
? surplus operator 0,84
? surplus users CT
Time gains 4,47
Comfort gains 4,47
Subways decongestion 4,57
?surplus car users
On Maréchaux -6,85
On radials -1,83
Externalities
Congestion BP -33,31
CO2 emissions -0,10
Total -444,34 -27,74
20WHAT DID WE LEARN?
- Negative NPV of 888 M with a 30 years horizon
- Impossible to find a positive IRR
- Environmental objective is not reached
- Car users (from poor suburbs) are the losers of
the T3s project - The T3 users are the winners. 60 are richer
Parisians - When only 15 of the cost is paid by the
municipality, the rest by the region
21CONCLUSION
- Cities need a bundle of means of transportation,
cars and PT - Among PT, the choice btw subway, train and bus
hardly rely on density - Subway or light trains are good for high density
zone and/or mass commuting trip - Buses are cheaper and more flexible elsewhere
22A CONSERVER
23A CLEAR PICTURE
p
Ob
Oa
C
PB
B
PA
A
F
E
D
q
QC
QB
QA
Stay
Switch
Stop
24- Assumption the shift follows the same
distribution law - Speed-density relation
- V(q) 77,1 -0,25q
- Private cost
- I(q) 0,12 1,310,2/V(q)
- Social cost
- S(q) I(q) I(q)q
- Marginal congestion cost
- Cm(q) S(q) I(q) 3,315q/(77,1- 0,25q)2