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February 25, 2019

Rethinking traffic congestion to make our cities more like the places we want them to be

Credit: Edgar Fernando Barrientos from Pexels
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Credit: Edgar Fernando Barrientos from Pexels

Soon after becoming prime minister last year, Scott Morrison appointed a minister for "", signalling the importance he attaches to this issue. The large number of Google search results on "traffic congestion in Australian cities 2019" (9.5 million) and "traffic congestion in Australian cities costing the economy 2019" (8.3 million) seems to support his opinion.

But what if this concern for is based more on "groupthink" than a careful look at the relevant data? What if congestion is not such a big social or economic problem? What if congestion costs are overemphasised?

In thinking about these questions, it should be recognised that there is always an , which exceeds the road space available, so building more roads . Congestion soon returns but with more vehicles affected than before. In addition, with rising population and living standards.

Is traffic congestion a problem for the economy?

The Bureau of Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Economics (BITRE) estimated the for Australia's eight capital cities at . While the estimate is carefully calculated, there is scope to consider other relevant factors such as:

  1. traffic congestion is usually a problem only for commuters in or near metropolitan CBD areas – for other road users, their average time delay is a relatively minor problem
  2. the BITRE estimate is a small proportion (about 1%) of Australia's 2015 GDP
  3. more than one-third of the A$16.5 billion estimate is for private time costs that
  4. except perhaps for congestion charging, avoiding the BITRE cost estimate would require capital expenditure, reducing the net benefit that action to reduce congestion costs could capture
  5. the BITRE estimate gives insufficient attention to in response to congestion.

There is evidence that road users, both private and business, adapt to congestion by changing travel route and time of travel, as well as changing location. In addition, the effects of the so-called Marchetti travel time budget (time saved on one route tends to be used for more travel elsewhere rather than for non-travel purposes) does not seem to have been considered in the BITRE calculations.

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Using congestion to guide development

While the avoidable social costs of road congestion are arguably not a big deal, it's pretty clear congestion plays a significant role in .

Urban planners in Vancouver recognised this some 40 years ago. Rather than trying to reduce traffic congestion, they consciously used that congestion to limit commuter car access to the centre. They went so far as to say "".

A "carrot and stick" approach was adopted in Vancouver. Traffic congestion was used to discourage commuting by car from the suburbs to the CBD. At the same time, complementary urban planning and design policies were enacted to make the inner city a more attractive place to live for all family types including those with young children. High-quality public transport (particularly the ) to the CBD was expanded to cover more of the metropolitan area, providing an attractive alternative to commuting by car.

Of course, congestion management can be used to support other land use planning strategies, such as metropolitan decentralisation. Again this would require a "carrot and stick" approach.

Congestion narrative fuels 'the infrastructure turn'

Urban researchers have identified what has been called "the infrastructure turn". This is an excessive focus on building infrastructure, particularly large transport infrastructure, rather than on integrated strategic land use and transport planning.

The infrastructure focus is a simplistic response to growing city populations. Importantly, it fails to manage travel demand towards a more sustainable long-term result, such as metropolitan decentralisation like Sydney's "" approach.

Emphasising congestion and its estimated costs reinforces a sense that , and supports the "infrastructure turn".

Planning for the city we desire

A best practice approach to metropolitan planning requires that transport planning and land use planning work together to achieve a desired future for the city. And determines this desired future. The performance of the transport system should be measured mainly by how well this desired future is being achieved, rather than by the level of traffic congestion.

While is real and annoying to many (and also a worry for politicians like the ), it's not a big social or economic problem. Instead, the congestion could be managed – rather than just catering to projected demand – so our cities become more like the places we want them to be.

Provided by The Conversation

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