Before we run through a list of the various options, first a
challenge: whatever the “solution” to an imminent urban congestionastrophe, let’s
try agree that whatever succeeds needs to provide a personalised mobility
solution: it needs to be available on demand (there when I need it), offer
infinitely variable routes (takes me where I want to go and when I want to go,
which differs every day), and can carry my stuff (from groceries to whatever).
Ideally it’s also expandable (can carry more than one person when I have
someone travelling with me) and offers good range and rapid recharge/refuelling.
Sounds a lot like a personal car doesn’t it? This probably
also explains why they have proven so successful in meeting community needs. But
what are the other options in the future? Here goes…
Shared car ownership. It’s been touted as something
of a solution to car ownership but doesn’t seem to address congestion so much.
Plus, things like Goget (car sharing app) have struggled. Perhaps having one
parked in our garage, ready and waiting, is still just too convenient?
Passenger rail. The great hope of many but, in my
opinion, never to repeat its historic 19th and 20th century
popularity. The routes are fixed, the overhead wires are fixed, the stations
are fixed, and the schedules fixed. It struggles to serve the realities of
modern life with multiple trips and different routes daily. It isn’t convenient
for carrying our stuff and mostly suits the 9 to 5 centralised office worker
market, which is shrinking globally. The average
CBD share of metro wide jobs for a city in a modern western economy is around
13% - and that was before the ‘work from anywhere’ thing started to take
off post Covid. It actually carries very few people (just 10% of work trips
across capitals in Australia using pre-covid numbers from 2016 – the 2021 journey
to work numbers being Covid affected) and is frightfully expensive – especially
underground. At over $100million per kilometre on surface, you’d struggle to
find a more expensive and less popular mode of travel. Worldwide, infrastructure
projects with massively blown budgets and under performing passenger numbers
often feature passenger rail (except China, where everything is different).
Buses. Not as popular as rail (5% of passenger in
Australia capitals) but more popular than trains in Brisbane - possibly because
they service a wider variety of routes using the road network? Buses can be
re-routed with ease and bus stops are low capital intensive investments. But
they are still not “on demand” or offer personalised routes, nor are they very
convenient for doing the shopping. They have been around a long time but the
mode share has stubbornly not moved much. Unlikely to do so in the future
either.
Metro. Trackless trams or metros are a modern solution which may gain a lot of support. They don’t require permanent rail or overhead wires, they are electric, and potentially autonomous. They provide a higher level of comfort than buses and can be rerouted using the road network if needed (all of which makes them much cheaper than trains). They can also turn corners (which trains struggle with) plus in Brisbane they are promised as a high frequency service (so no need to check a schedule). Metro stations are more capital intensive than traditional bus stops, and like other public transport modes, aren’t exactly the preferred way to do the groceries, visit the doctor or get the kids to school. Still, in all likelihood, a big step forward in the future.
Ferries. “Believe me, my young friend, there is nothing – absolutely nothing – half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats.” So said Ratty to Mole in Wind in the Willows. Ratty was right – a more pleasant way to travel is hard to find. But when it comes to solving congestion by providing a meaningful alternative to cars, ferries aren’t the go-to choice. They are confined to water ways for starters. And they don’t usually go near shops or schools. They are expensive to operate and maintain (ferries need terminals and require a lot of maintenance) on a per passenger basis. The lucky few who can make use of these on a regular basis can count themselves very fortunate.
Cycling & walking. Fun fact: three times as many
people walk to work (3.2%) as bicycle (around 1%). The numbers
on active transport are an interesting read. Active travel works for people
when their jobs are close to where they live. Any more than a few kilometres
away though, and walking or cycling drops right down. Hint to urban planners:
don’t segregate future housing from future work places and you might see more
active travel. On the downside though, climate (too hot, too cold, too wet or
too unpredictable) are factors difficult to overcome. It’s also difficult to
carry your shopping bags any great distance (unless you steal the supermarket
trolley which the visual evidence says happens a lot). Unlikely to ever make a
big dent in urban congestion, however appealing the idea.
Uber buses. Yet to gain a lot of traction here are Uber buses – a way of tailoring schedules and routes to users. It’s working overseas and I witnessed a non-tech version in Vanuatu a few years ago (the bus driver asked where you were going and, based on where all passengers were going, worked out the route from there). The Uber bus is typically a smaller bus which varies routes and schedules around user demand. Sounds great in theory, provided they don’t cancel on you, or hit you with a surge. The technology platform that makes this possible ought to be something public transport agencies look into further. Will it bust congestion? Unlikely, but with support it could make an impact.
Flying cars & taxis. They’re coming, and I want one! Brisbane has announced the promise of flying taxis by the time of the 2032 Olympics. Other cities will follow. The technology is proven and trials of various personal flying cars are underway with some already available – if you have the cash. One thing promoters haven’t counted on is Australia’s love of regulation, and I fear that Federal aviation authorities will pose so many constraints on operations in the sky that it will be decades before private users will be buzzing around like George Jetson. As for parking one at your local shops… yeah, nah – that just takes shopping centre parking to a third dimension!!!
Scooters & e-bikes. Love them or hate them, there’s no denying they’ve been rapidly adopted where they’ve been allowed. For shorter trips they are brilliant. But they aren’t cheap to hire, and scooters are useless for carrying anything more than the wallet in your pocket, and have the same climate issues as active transport. Plus, regulators are introducing so many geofencing limits that their appeal is being limited. However, privately owned e-bikes that make use of extensive bikeway or active transport networks could potentially see a rise in popularity – shopping baskets included. Provided the lithium battery doesn’t burn your house down, these could be useful to have in your garage.
As for me, I think the maths is undeniable. Millions more people will mean millions more cars (for now) so it will get a lot worse before it gets better (if it does). Which is why you’ll continue to find me on the one form of transport that’s ready when I am and is able to sneak through traffic snarls while bringing a smile to your dial. And if it rains? A small price to pay.
Keep the rubber side down!
Entertaining and as usual on the money Good job Ross
ReplyDeleteWell done Ross-having spent the prior week in barcelona(ic visit twice a year as our son lives there)i have watched them attack the car syndrome with a level of gusto
ReplyDeleteClosing a lot of streets within the CBD ie L,Eixample and forcing cars onto major routes-bikes and scooters everywhere but they are always returned to a docking station otherwise you are heavily fined(you have to be a citizen and access via a credit card only)a lot of other stuff going on as well
If only we could get a decent dialogue going in this great country of ours -we will be still having the debate when the population reaches the numbers you are projecting!! Greg
Just been in Barcelona myself a few weeks ago. A 'flat' easily accessible city ... spent most of my time in the Gothic Quarter where the narrow lanes struggle to provide commercial access .... those drivers are incredible getting around to service the place ... saw very few e-scooters and bicycles.
DeleteThey are building a new / extending the existing tram system. 😁
Thought provoking as usual, Ross.
ReplyDeleteFlying cars by 2032? They can't deal with accidents & congestion on the ground let alone in the sky.
e-Cars on demand? Where will they idle, the roads are chockers already. e-Scooters are polluting sidewalks already.
Planners have much to ponder their centralised thinking for the past +30 years.
Personally I don't have confidence in planners to come up with complex solutions given their history.
Most travel is going to be by automobile, but that doesn't mean transportation has to get worse. First, Australian cities need to abandon their growth boundaries and allow people to live where they want. It's not like the country is going to run out of land. Developers will build new local and some collector roads for people to drive on and most people won't be driving into the congested central cities anyway. Low-density development is a rational response to congestion.
ReplyDeleteSecond, Australian states need to come up with sound user fees to pay for new roads. New driving means more user fee revenues which will pay for those roads. Whether those fees should be fuel excise taxes, per-mile fees, tolls, or just vehicle-registration fees is debatable, but if you have a good user fee mechanism then congestion won't have to get worse. The system won't work if all fuel taxes etc. simply go into general funds out of which politicians allocate some funds for roads.
Agreed!
DeleteCan add cableway/aerial tramway for extra whimsical. RecentIy did an analysis for a cableway (tourism) and discovered it is being used as serious urban mobility in some parts of the world, not just parts of tourist attractions. Who knew?
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