DocumentCode
1817729
Title
Moving towards pay as you drive
Author
Walker, Julian ; Blythe, Phil ; Pickford, Andrew
Author_Institution
Transp. Res. Group, Southampton Univ., Southampton, UK
fYear
2012
fDate
25-26 Sept. 2012
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
6
Abstract
It was not until the 1990s that successful road user charging schemes emerged in Singapore, London and Stockholm. The excuse was that `the technology is not yet proven´, plus the difficulty of making a lucid case to politicians, businesses and individual travellers that all would benefit from the introduction of road pricing in congested cities and arterial routes. This paper shows that technology can now provide solutions to deliver innovative charging policies. We review key schemes and trials, show what can be learnt from them and how the technical innovations and the evolution in policy thinking permit schemes that make road pricing acceptable and relevant to today´s congestion, energy, climate change and fiscal challenges. Moreover, these innovations enable policy makers and road operators to offer a `new deal´ for road users where ownership and fuel taxes can be replaced by more effective “pay as you drive” (PAYD) schemes based on TDP (time, distance, place) charging.
Keywords
government policies; road pricing (tolls); road traffic; traffic engineering computing; London; Singapore; Stockholm; TDP charging; pay as you drive schemes; policy thinking permit schemes; road pricing; road user charging schemes; time-distance-place charging; HOV & HOT lanes; congestion charging; lorry road user charging; road pricing; road user charging;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
iet
Conference_Titel
Road Transport Information and Control (RTIC 2012), IET and ITS Conference on
Conference_Location
London
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-84919-674-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1049/cp.2012.1547
Filename
6489865
Link To Document