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Transport Sector Performance Indicators: Sri Lanka Existing Situation. Amal S. Kumarage Professor, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Moratuwa Chairman, National Transport Commission kumarage@sltnet.lk 21 st April 05. Overview of Land Transport & the Economy- 2003.
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Transport Sector Performance Indicators: Sri Lanka Existing Situation Amal S. KumarageProfessor, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Moratuwa Chairman, National Transport Commission kumarage@sltnet.lk 21st April 05
Overview of Land Transport & the Economy- 2003 • GDP – Rs 1,400 billion • Value Addition to Economy Rs 178 billion (12%) • Employment Direct 700,000 (11% of national) • Government Capital Allocation Rs 300 bn • Government Expenditure on Transport Sector • Highways Rs 13.5 bn (4.5%) • Transport Rs 6.5 bn (2%)
Sri Lanka Transport: The Demand • Population 19 million • Distribution 70% in rural areas • Metro Areas – Colombo 3 million • Town Centres – 50,000 to 300,000 • GDP per capita US$ 980 • Employment (Agricultural based 45%, industries 25%, services 30%)
Sri Lanka Transport: The Supply • Transport Infrastructure • Transport Services
Transport Infrastructure • Highways • Expressways -None • National Highways -11,760 kms • Provincial Highways -15,743 kms • Rural Roads -68,843 kms • Footpaths & Tracks – estimated at 120,000 kms • Railways 1,449 kms • Navigable Inland Waterways – less than 100 kms
Ancient Modern
Vehicle Ownership per 100 households (Central Bank, Consumer Finance Surveys)
Priorities in Land Transport • Reduce Total Transport & Externality Cost for Economy. • Improve Quality/Service Levels of Public Transport. • Reduce Financial Burden of Public Transport on Treasury through Strategic Reform of SLR and Cluster Cos. • Managing Road Space & Traffic Flow by Levying charges to recover actual cost of Road Use • Reduce the burden from road accidents and environmental impacts
Description of Sub Sectors • Buses • Railways • Three Wheelers • Trucking • Private Transport • Rural Transport
Bus Transport In Sri Lanka Private Individual Operators (1907) Re-entry of Private Individual Operators (1978) Formation of Companies (1942) Formation of Companies? Nationalization (1958)
Impact of Bus Transport on Sri Lankan Society & Economy • 50 billion passenger kms per year 65% of all travel • 30 billion Rupees in economic value 3% of GDP • 10 million trips per day 2 trips per household per day • 80 % households use the bus at least 1 time per week • Also 84,000 persons directly employed
What are the basic problems facing the industry? • Inadequate fares Inadequate investment in buses? • Weak regulation Lack of Enforcement • Weak Market Structure Unmanageable number of operators • Abandonment of professional practices poorly managed industry Although regulated fares, and the single bus ownership have been the most quoted reasons for this state of affairs, recent study and documentation reveals that a host of regulatory lapses are in fact the primary cause of this situation.
Performance Indicators- Buses • Quality – Load Factor, Journey Speeds, Directness, Availability during unprofitable times, routes. Reliability • Efficiency: Bus Utilisation, Revenue/Cost per km. • Fare – Affordability to lower income deciles. • Cost to Society: Net Subsidy • Safety- crew standards, accidents, bus standards • Convenience & Comfort- value additions. • Niche Markets: Schools, Offices, Industries served • Infrastructure: Terminals, Stops, Busways
Railway Transport • Fully regulated since inception • Problem areas • Lack of commercial/passenger interest • Pre-occupation with employee rights • High financial losses • Abortive attempts on unbundling or private investment/management
Performance Indicators- Trains • Quality – Load Factor, Journey Speeds. • Efficiency: Track & Rolling Stock Utilization • Fare – Affordability to lower income deciles. • Cost to Society: subsidies less externality benefits • Safety- track & rolling stock standards, • Convenience & Comfort- value additions. • Niche Markets: Freight, Tourism • Infrastructure: Land Utilisation, Station Development
Three Wheelers • Popularity rising due to deterioration of public transport • Primary reason being attractive as means of self-employment • Presently 142,000 vehicles, but transport 2% of share. • Problem areas: • Cartelisation • Inefficiency
Performance Indicators- Three Wheelers • Quantity & Efficiency: Vehicle Utilisation • Fare – Affordability to middle income deciles. • Cost to Society: pollution and parking costs
Trucking • Has always been fully deregulated • Efficient in corporate settings • In informal settings, poor productivity, high fares, externalities • Trucking is subsidized by the Govt.
Performance Indicators- Trucks • Efficiency: Vehicle Utilization • Cost to shippers. • Cost to Society: externalities due to pavement damage, congestion, pollution • Safety- vehicle and crew standards, • Infrastructure: Logistics Centres, Warehousing
Vehicles/Traffic in Colombo City • 140,000 vehicle enter the city daily • 1,000,000 passengers enter the city daily • 64% arrive by bus (takes 25% of road space) • 10% arrive by railway • 26% arrive by private transport (takes 65% of road space)
The Problems of Road Safety • Costs 2200+ lives, disables 4,000+, injures a further 12,000. • Damage only accidents 38,848. • Total accidents 57,618 • Only 700 (4%) receive any compensation. • Economic Cost of accidents Rs. 10 billion ++ • Risk of death due to road accident has risen from 1 in 115 (1977) to 1 in 51 (2002)
Performance Indicators- Private Vehicles • Efficiency: Network Speed, Vehicle Occupancy • Cost to users as VOC. • Cost to Society: externalities due to congestion, pollution and accidents • Safety & Environment- vehicle and crew standards, • Infrastructure: User Separation, Intersection Control
Performance Indicators Rural Transport • Accessibility (to basic services, employment opportunities and markets) • Ownership of vehicles • Affordability of services
Performance Indicators- Overall Transport • Efficiency: Network Speeds (rail, roads, bus) • Cost to Government: Net Subsidies • Resource Utilization: Energy Efficiency, Land Utilization, • Affordability of different modes to different sectors of society • Cost to Society: inputs plus externalities due to congestion, pollution and accidents • Employment Generation • Safety & Environment- minimum standards,
Economic Cost of Transport 2003 Direct Operating Costs • Railways Rs 4,700 mn • Buses Rs 36,288 mn • Three Wheelers Rs 13,230 mn • Private Vehicles Rs 71,875 mn • Goods Transport Rs 61,000 mn • TOTAL Rs 178,393 mn Cost of Externalities • Time Value > 30 km/hr Rs 77,500 mn • Time Value <30km/hr Rs 16,250 mn • Unpaid Accident Costs Rs 10,000 mn • Environmental Rs 2,000 mn • TOTAL Rs. 105,750 mn
Fuel Consumption-2003 • Diesel 2,700 mn litres – Rs. 91,000 mn • Petrol 400 mn litres – Rs. 12,000 mn • Fuel Cost for railways - Rs 3,500 mn • Fuel Cost for buses - Rs. 3,000 mn • 10% of fuel for railways/buses – but they carry 73% of passengers. • Over the last few months all these costs have increased by around 60%.
Government Expenditure 2003 Expenditure • Roads – National Rs.11,300 mn • Roads – Provincial Rs. 2,151 mn • Railways Rs 3,500 mn • Buses Rs 3,000 mn TOTAL Rs 20,000 mn Income • Vehicle taxes etc. Rs 12,000 mn • Import Taxes Rs 5,000 mn • Taxes on Fuel Rs 5,000 mn • Registration/Annual License Rs 2,000 mn TOTAL Rs 24,000 mn