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Overview on Interurban Road Pricing

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Title: Overview on Interurban Road Pricing


1
Overview on Interurban Road Pricing
  • Going from A to B against a fair price

2
It leads to more and better roads and therefore
to more economic growth
It is just a new way of filling the treasury
It enhances the choices of the consumer
It is the solution to make cars cleaner
3
Interurban Road Pricing content
  • What is interurban transport?
  • Why do we want to implement Interurban Road
    Pricing?
  • State of the art
  • The economic perspective searching for the best
    implementation paths
  • The technological perspective searching for an
    electronic breakthrough
  • Gaining Social Acceptance leads to less optimal
    implementation paths
  • Conclusions on implementing Interurban Road
    Pricing?

4
What is interurban road transport?The majority
of EU mobility
  • All trips gt 15 km
  • Passenger appr 80 of all car km.
  • Freight gt 90 of all tonkm
  • Increasing share, especially 80-250 km category

5
Reasons behind Interurban Road Pricing (IRP)
  • Need for new (road) infrastructure and limited
    public funds. With interurban road pricing the
    private sector could be involved (see for
    instance France)
  • 350B still required to complete TENs.
  • 100B needed for the new Member States.
  • 15-20B currently invested by the EU
  • Towards fair and efficient pricing for transport.
  • Fair competition among transport modes social
    marginal cost pricing would maximize the social
    surplus, i.e. the sum of the producers' surplus
    ( the profits of private and public transport
    enterprises) and the consumers' surplus.
  • With the help of social marginal cost pricing it
    is possible to confront every user with real
    costs (assuming that at the moment this is not
    the case). This means that
  • All external effects of transport will be
    internalized and
  • Management of traffic flows (to fight congestion
    or even contain demand growth)

6
State of the art_1 Tolling exists in a number
of countries
  • Tolled motorways (long tradition - EU country)
  • France and Portugal relied on tolls since early
    stages in the development of their road network
  • Tolled roads (short tradition Non-EU country)
  • Switzerland the first country in Europe in which
    am IRP was implemented to charge infrastructure
    and environmental costs according to actual
    mileage performed by HGV's on the whole national
    road network.
  • Hungary A pioneering motorway project financed
    through tolls immediately after political change
    in Central Europe
  • Mature for introduction of tolls
  • Austria and Germany, implementation process is
    going on
  • Netherlands was planning to implement a km
    charging system for all vehicles, specifically
    conceived to introduce interurban road pricing to
    support demand management/increase accessibility.
  • Newcomer (Nordic countries)
  • Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, quite an
    integrated regional economy with common
    approaches to both environmental motor fuel
    taxation and Eurovignette Norway also has a
    long-standing tradition in electronic pricing
    around urban areas to fund investment on local
    road networks.
  • Source DESIRE Project

7
State of the art_2National perspectives
dominates
  • National decisions concerning IRP are strongly
    determined by financial needs
  • National decisions in the cluster of mature for
    introduction of tolls (Austria, Germany and the
    Netherlands) are by far the most critical for
    development of electronic IRP in the near future
  • In many countries (including those where
    electronic IRP systems are in operation) regional
    impacts of alternative system configurations are
    key issues in national dossiers.
  • In contexts where HGV charges are levied (either
    manually of automatically) to internalise
    environmental costs besides infrastructure costs,
    this will likely generate a surplus revenue,
    except in regions with low traffic volumes.
  • Interoperability is in general not a major
    priority

8
The economic perspective
  • First best pricing
  • Theoretical optimal situation, but in practice
    not (easy) feasible
  • Second best pricing
  • What is the optimal implementation path? Such as
  • Passenger versus freight
  • Road versus not road
  • Differentiation versus no differentiation
  • Within MC ICAM several implementation paths are
    evaluated (focus on freight)
  • Do nothing (no new policies)
  • Full social marginal cost pricing (All modes)
  • Only freight road transport
  • Only road (passenger freight)

9
Do Nothing policy increased transport volume
leads to increased externalities despite reduced
externalities per kilometre
10
Total transport performance only differs a little
between MSCP implementation paths
11
Overall welfare effect of MSCP is positive for
all implementation paths in the long term
  • But effect depends strongly on the way revenues
    are used (and on assumptions concerning labour
    markets and consumer behaviour)

12
Revenue use strongly influences welfare effect
(and optimal charge) Source KU Leuven model
13
Optimal congestion charge for freight is lower
when passenger transport is also chargedSource
KU Leuven model
14
Routes change due to geographical differentiation
is for road a major impact This could lead to
more vehicle km rail and waterway have little
alternatives(source SMILE Model Netherlands case)
15
Welfare effects are positive if prices are set
equal or lower than social marginal costs.
Welfare effect is negative if prices are above
social marginal costs. Overpricing must be
avoided(source SMILE Model Netherlands case)
16
Welfare impacts differ between countries with
toll systems and without toll systemsCharging
Only freight road transport versus all road
transport is half of the impact
  • Country First Best Freight Freight All
    Mway All
  • Mway all roads traffic road traffic
  • Spain 100 -26 63 -86 77
  • France 100 -4 43 -51 64
  • Italy 100 60 36 -44 63
  • Portugal 100 -3 59 -10 75
  • Austria 100 37 53 57 87
  • Belgium 100 36 50 63 90
  • Denmark 100 16 42 57 93
  • Finland 100 46 87 48 88
  • Germany 100 19 27 63 95
  • Greece 100 26 82 27 89
  • Ireland 100 4 85 6 95
  • Lux. 100 12 29 32 92
  • NL 100 26 37 71 92
  • Sweden 100 41 76 47 89
  • UK 100 18 52 32 96
  • TOTAL 100 21 41 47 92

17
Uncertainties on expected transport demand still
exist
  • Estimation of behavioral responses of road
    freight transport differs considerably per
    transport model. Reasons
  • Modeling transport costs versus logistic costs
    (demand elasticity versus impact higher transport
    costs on overall production costs)
  • Differences in presuppositions on the ability to
    work more efficient trough enhancing the
    transport efficiency (less empty km and larger
    trucks)
  • The use of the revenues
  • Economic sense versus acceptability issues
  • And if for instance certain user groups are
    compensated what will be their behavioral
    response?
  • Second order impacts
  • Relation employee employer what happens if the
    commuter is compensated for his higher costs?
  • Location choice of consumers and business will be
    effected by a different price regime.

18
Technological perspective_1
  • From toll systems towards electronic pricing
    systems
  • Electronic road pricing systems
  • Successful in local situations (Norway, London)
  • In use in Switzerland
  • Under construction for interurban applications
    (Germany)
  • There are no technological barriers, But TNO
    research for the Dutch KM charging system showed
    (source TNO FEL, 2001)
  • The retrofit issue
  • it takes time to produce the in-board units and
    to equip all vehicles
  • Per vehicle the technological specifications can
    differ
  • Accuracy at least 2 margin can be expected
  • Devices tested are vulnerable for fraud
  • The private sector will not pay for all costs in
    a combined road pricing system able to charge
    consumers for their car use and offering all kind
    of new services

19
Only road pricing isnt enough to cover costs
Roadpricing systems typically generate almost no
mobile traffic, because Intelligent applications
are able to Switch mobile connection on when
needed Switch mobile connection off
asap Wholesale billing
20
Acceptance Issues gaining public support leads
to sub-optimal solutions
  • Most successful implementation of new forms of
    pricing can be found on the urban level (London,
    Trondheim, Singapore) with the exception of toll
    roads, interurban road pricing is faced with a
    lot of opposition
  • In successful cases an alternative is available
    (Public Transport, another road).
  • Revenues are directly invested in the same area
    (better public transport, new road
    infrastructure)
  • A clear understanding by the public what the
    problem is (congestion or quality of life)

21
Implementing interurban road pricing The
economic optimum versus the real world
  • Main focus is on freight transport. However from
    a economic point of view passenger transport
    should be included as well
  • MSC pricing
  • Majority of people gains if revenues are used
    well, for instance lowering labor tax
  • However for gaining public support it is better
    to choose for investing the revenues in the
    transport system
  • Charging only interurban road traffic has a major
    impact on welfare levels (Scenes model says 90
    of first best situation)
  • Welfare impacts differ strongly per country due
    to
  • Different existing levels of charging
  • Different charging systems
  • Major distortions are toll roads
  • Do not underestimate the technological aspects
  • We are on the right track, but the remaining road
    is still long
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