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Long Term Urban Transport Policy. Annual India Conference Stanford Center for International Development Stanford University September 28, 2012 Rakesh Mohan Chairman National Transport Development Policy Committee www.transportpolicy.gov.in. Agenda.
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Long Term Urban Transport Policy Annual India Conference Stanford Center for International Development Stanford University September 28, 2012 Rakesh Mohan Chairman National Transport Development Policy Committee www.transportpolicy.gov.in
Agenda • Expectations for India’s growth over the next twenty years • Implications for urban growth • The present state of urban transport in India • Estimates of infrastructure investment requirements • The future of urban transport in India
4k Rs 70k ($ 1400) 12k 30% 50+ 70+ 40% 25k 485 1300 72% 90% 1.3k Economic growth: Implications (A) Transformed demographics India GDP estimate INR trillion (USD trillion) Urban population estimate (million) 610 370 2030 2010 300 (6.0) % Urban Million+ cities Passenger traffic (bpkm) 85 (1.7) (B) Transformed economic activity 2010 2030 Industrial GDPestimate INR bn (USD bn) 98,325 (2,185) 16,200 (360) Per-capita income estimate INR (USD) Rs 198k ($ 4500) 2030 2010 Coal (mn ton) Oil imports Freight traffic (btkm)
Urban India: 1951 • Only 5 cities with pop > 1m • 41 cities with pop > 0.1m • Much of India in 0.56m villages
Urban India: 2011 • 3 cities with pop > 10m • 53 cities with pop > 1m • 833m live in 0.64m villages
Urban India: 2031 • 6 cities with pop > 10m • 70 cities with pop > 1m • How many Indians will live in towns?
Top 10 cities: 1951 0.1% Land 0.1% 0.1% 8% 8% 8% Population 15% 15% 15% Output
Million+ cities: 53 in 2011 0.2% Land 13% Population Output 32%
Top 100 cities: 2011 Land 0.24% Population 16% Output 43%
Urban sprawl: Delhi 1992 8.7 million 8.7 million 1992
Urban sprawl: Delhi 2000 13.7 million 13.7 million 2000 8.7 million 1992
Urban sprawl: Delhi 2011 16.3 million 16.3 million 2011 13.7 million 2000 8.7 million 1992
Urban sprawl: Bangalore 1992 3.4 million 8.7 million 1992
Urban sprawl: Bangalore 2001 5.7 million 8.7 million 2001 1992
Urban sprawl: Bangalore 2011 5.7 million 2009 8.7 million 2001 1992
Agenda • Expectations for India’s growth over the next twenty years • Implications for urban growth • The present state of urban transport in India • Estimates of infrastructure investment requirements • The future of urban transport in India
Urban transport in India: The scene • A multitude of modes and poor co-ordination between them • Non-motorised transport (walking and bicycling) • Intermediate public transport (rickshaws, taxis and tempos) • Buses and BRT systems • Company buses and vans • Suburban rail-based services and metros • Private motorised modes (cars and two-wheelers) • Much variation in demand and supply distributions over modes across cities
Urban transport in India: The scene • Large cities • Trip rates and travel times are increasing • Significant and growing share of UT through motorised means • Poor air quality and higher levels of GHG emissions • Road fatalities are high and increasing • Pedestrians and cyclists given little consideration in planning
Urban transport in India: The scene • Small cities • Absence of organised public transport • Predominance of intermediate public transport modes • Basic facilities are missing—unpaved roads, drainage, signage • Three-wheelers, motorised two-wheelers, bicycles and walking are major transport modes
Urban transport: The issues • The demand for transport services is a derived demand • Derived from the essential requirement to leave home every day • To be where incomes are earned • To be where education/leisure/shopping may be pursued • Demand for transport is shaped by the geographic distribution of places of residence, employment, trade and other activities • But there are endogenous effects (or systemic feedback) • The availability of transport services determines where people choose to live, work and play
Urban transport in India: The issues • No answers to fundamental questions on transport demand • Lack of good information on travel patterns • Where do which people go and why? • How do people make their transport decisions? • Accessibility? • Mobility and connectedness? • Price? • Speed? • What matters most? What matters least?
Outcomes • Planning and investment decisions based on incomplete data and understanding • Resultant infrastructure may not actually address multi-dimensional transport demands • Little understanding of how planned infrastructure will influence future land use and the shape of the city • Resultant infrastructure may not maximise social welfare or offer maximum economic value for money
Economic issues • Misaligned incentives • Flyovers & urban highways encourage car use • Missing/tedious/dangerous footpaths and road crossings discourage walking and bicycling • Absent intermodal transfer facilities discourage PT use • Mispriced goods and services • Underpriced parking, road and vehicle taxes • Subsidised fuel
Institutional issues • Unclear responsibilities and lack of vertical co-ordination • Mismatches between responsibilities, abilities and resource mobilisation at central, state and municipal levels • Unclear responsibilities and lack of horizontal co-operation • Multiplicity of agencies and service providers at all levels • Lack of inter-modal connectivity • Duplicated services • Insufficient technical capacity at all levels • Transport planners, designers, engineers, and constructors • Safety advisors and auditors
Environmental issues • Safety • Vehicle safety and roadworthiness certifications • Unsafe roads, paths, intersections, urban rail • Overcrowding/overloading • Emissions and energy use • Fuel standards • Vehicle standards • Congestion • Under-consideration of life cycle costs • Costs involved in construction and in ancillary infrastructure and environmental damage not included uniformly in operating cost estimates
Agenda • Expectations for India’s growth over the next twenty years • Implications for urban growth • The present state of urban transport in India • Estimates of infrastructure investment requirements • The future of urban transport in India
Projected infrastructure expenditure: 1. McKinsey Over the next 20 years: Urban infrastructure investment:$1.20tr Urban transport : $590b MRTS : $390b Roads : $200b Water infrastructure : $200b
Projected infrastructure expenditure: 2. Ahluwalia expert committee Crore rupees Over the next 20 years Urban infrastructure: $785b Urban transport : $460b MRTS : $ 90b Roads : $350b Water : $150b
Projected investment estimates: 3. NTDPC sub-group Over the next 20 years Urban transport : $340b MRTS : $150b Roads : $190b
Agenda • Expectations for India’s growth over the next twenty years • Implications for urban growth • The present state of urban transport in India • Estimates of infrastructure investment requirements • The future of urban transport in India
Guiding Principles • Accessible transport for all users: cost, convenience, quality • Minimise UT costs and spending for while improving quality • Empower local governments with decision-making authority and financial/resource mobilisation capacity • When planning transport, consider all public transport modes and look to minimise life-cycle costs
Guiding Principles • •Emphasise improved safety and environmental standards • •Enhance technical capacity at central, state and local levels • •Fiscal regime to influence mode choice at all levels
Building Capacity—Decision making • Essential to develop appropriate technical and decision-making capacity at all levels • Role of centre restricted to: • Advisory and technical • Devise specifications and standards • Develop alternative financial models • Source of funds • State governments should decide policy, administer and enforce laws, and allot funds to cities • Local authorities must develop capacity to: • Plan, design and decide on urban transport networks • Supervise and co-ordinate implementation • Ensure inter-modal connectivity
Building Capacity—Implementation • Upgrade /reorganise ALL delivery agencies associated with urban transport with new mandates • PWD: only construction and maintenance, no mandate for transport planning • Police: only traffic control and law enforcement • New agency: traffic movements and signal operations • New agency: Vehicle inspection and certification
Building Capacity—Educational • Widespread introduction of courses on • Urban management, planning and land use • Transport planning and engineering • Information technology for urban transport • Safety design, methods, devices and auditing • Master’s-level programmes and other courses on urban transport in at least 25 institutions in the country • Greater R&D funding at IITs and regional engineering colleges
Stronger Institutional Framework • Unified Metropolitan Transport Authority (UMTA) • Statutory autonomous body • One UMTA for each city with population exceeding 1 million; dedicated cells in smaller cities • Fund allocation authority for urban transport projects • Authority to coordinate multi-modal transport projects • Three level institutional framework • Level 1: Metropolitan/district planning committee • Level 2: UMTA supported by trained urban transport professionals • Level 3: Existing city agencies to continue as executing agencies
Promoting Public Transport • Increase awareness about environmental damage from personal vehicles • Promote environmentally friendly commuting modes • Multi-modal integration • Physical integration • Network integration • Fare integration • Information integration • Institutional integration
Accessibility of public transport • Door to door planning in terms of time, cost & convenience • Involves 7 main steps • Walk facilities within about 500m of stations/stops • Vehicle access within about 3 km of stations/stops • Feeder service within about 5 km of stations/stops • Drop off & pick up at stations/stops • Park and ride at stations/stops • Land use control around stations/stops • Mandatory implementation of Disability Act
Demand Management • Levy a high parking fee—represents value of land occupied • Allocate parking space to public transport and non-motorized transport on priority • Restricted parking on main transit corridors • Road taxes, vehicle registration fees to be aligned with actual costs of providing urban road infrastructure and resultant negative externalities
Metro Mania • Huge policy and planning emphasis on metro and rail-based UT projects • Most capital-intensive UT option • May not necessarily be beneficial in terms of lifetime energy costs • Internationally, metros introduced at much higher levels of per-capita income • Restrict metros to cities >5mn population • General principle: all UT costs, including metros, to be borne by cities themselves through user charges and fiscal imposts
Walking and Bicycling • India has amongst the highest rates of walking and bicycling • Largely due to low per-capita incomes and not by choice • Despite absence of basic infrastructure and unsafe conditions • Must not be taken for granted • Arrest slide to private motorised modes as incomes rise • Encouragements • Dedicated footpaths and cycle lanes • Safer crossings on priority • Make transfers to bus and rail easy and convenient • Provide bicycle parking
The way forward • Strengthen the existing weak and fragmented institutional framework for urban transport • Rethink land use to minimise transport demand • Promote non-motorised vehicular transport • Improve public transport: bus services, metro, commuter rail • Improve intermediate public transport systems
The message • India’s transport infra spend over the next 20 years driven by: • Overall economic growth • Woeful state of current infrastructure • Increasing urbanisation • Aim to design policy interventions that support establishment of affordable, economically viable, socially acceptable and environmentally sound transport systems • Interventions include increased infra spending, new institutions and institutional re-design, increased investment in human capital and R&D, and a multi-modal transport network with compatible incentives