Having opened our MaaS Market conference, Anne Berner took time out to talk to ITS International about the role of government, MaaS and road user charging.
Anne Berner, Finland’s minister of transport and communications, does not fit the normal political mould. She is not a career politician but a business executive who became a member of parliament in 2015 and has said from the outset that she will only serve one term. Without concerns about being re-elected and a clear view of the future of transport, Berner can concentrate on what needs to be done - tackling some of the more contentious and intransigent subjects. 
     
Her name is best known for two major initiatives: the reform of Finland’s Transport Code and attempting to introduce a nationwide road user charging system for state roads (and other state-owned transport infrastructure).
     
In Finland, the government’s stated intention is for less, but smarter, regulation which allow space for innovation and technological developments and provide a ‘level playing field’ for all players. So in revising the country’s Transport Code, the aim is to deregulate existing transport while laying the foundations for future transport models such as Mobility as a Service (MaaS) and for the digitalisation of the entire sector. 
     
She starts with, perhaps, the biggest problem of all, saying: “We need to have the leadership to come out of silos. Not only of transport modes and industries but also when it comes to government – and that is far more difficult believe me. 
     
“No longer are we doing transport policy and communications policy. We are doing policy for networks, for services, for data management and data handling to bring different fields together. And that has helped us understand what MaaS is all about and the kind of legislation and regulation it needs.
     
“We have to look at the transport system as one entity - with no borders and the ability to share data on payments, tickets and location.
     
“So we decided not to reform the taxi law, the laws for public transport and those for the transport of goods on roads and other different pieces of legislation. We decided to remove those old laws and create a new Transport Code that incorporates all transport modes into one piece of legislation, to be technology neutral and to create the same level playing field for different transport modes. We also decided it needed to have certain criteria: it must be user-centric, based on connectivity and not capacity, and has to be market driven.
 
The Finnish government is taking a particularly strong stance on data sharing, stating that only companies offering open ticketing application programming interfaces (APIs) can work within the public transport system. “Any authority spending taxpayer money cannot buy services from suppliers not working with accessible data - we need the space for new operators, the possibilities arising from interoperability between ticketing and payment systems throughout our country.”
     
Initially, the revision of the Transport Code is focussed on roads as Berner says the legislative environment for taxis and buses is far behind that for rail, air and sea. “So we focus in the first part on creating a technology neutral system which is transport mode neutral and allows the combination of people or persons, mail and goods – on one ticket, one user interface.” 
     
In doing so, some 180 paragraphs of regulations have been halved. “Where we do regulate strictly, the focus is on safety and consumer protection but we don’t regulate any technologies to allow new offerings, such as MaaS, to become a reality.” 
     
Rail, air and sea transport will be in the next phase of legislation but as these are complicated by an international dimension, Berner says making ticketing systems work together will be even more difficult because of the need to share personal data which raises privacy concerns. 
     
“So we are looking again with the restraint of data protection and privacy and ask: ‘How do we create systems that are customer-centric and provide a complete travel chain’. Here we see potential in using My Data model where we hope that giving the passenger the power to decide on the right to share and reuse their personal data and looking at the revised directive on payment services to find new solutions to deliver that.” 
     
Even in low population density Finland, environmental considerations are shaping future regulation as it is committed to halving transport emissions by 2030 - and most of those emissions come from private cars. “So we have to create services that are competitive to owing your owning car in terms of flexibility, feasibility and mobility which make it easy to let go at least of your second car.”
     
Autonomous vehicles figure large in Berner’s thinking. “We think Finland should be among the first countries to have an enabled automated driverless system within all modes and we are working on every piece of legislation to try to eliminate any obstacles.”
 
In the wider context she says future mobility is not just about  transport but also about communications, media, store locations, trade  and services with everything becoming integrated within Mobility as a  Service. This provides enormous new business potential for all those  that are within these fields.  
     
The  shape of this future mobility will depend on the balance between  interfering through legislation and allowing the market to fulfil its  potential. Berner has a guiding philosophy: “Look as far ahead as  possible and remember that government terms are short and policy making  is difficult, so we have to understand what decisions we need to make  today to achieve targets for 2030. 
     
“When  you look at Finland we are full of transport problems. We are a nation  of 5.5million people with 3million cars and 450,000km of roads to  maintain. EU targets mean that by 2030 Finland has to reduce emissions  by 39% from the non-emission trading sector compared to the 2005 level.  Emissions from domestic transport amounted to about 20% of all emissions  and about 40% of the emissions in the non-emission trading sector. So  we have to find solutions. 
     
“If  we only look at things at the city level we will not achieve our  overall goals. I think the only way we can maintain a nation of our  physical and geographical size and very spread out, is to create  on-demand services. In fact digitalisation, technology developments and  on-demand transport solutions are the only way we can survive and  provide our people with nationwide public transport systems also in  sparsely populated areas.
     
“So  we need to create an interesting enough environment and strong enough  demand for businesses to invest in order to provide services that will  change behaviours, transport modes that cross borders and data systems  that can operate across borders. Coordination between governments is  vital to create those markets.” 
     
One  of her domestic initiatives, road user charging, failed to get  parliamentary approval but Berner is not demoralised or defeated – quite  the contrary, she is very upbeat, saying: “Our study was published and  in four days we had to drop it because we could not get it through. But  the big picture is still correct. 
     
“Most  societies are enormously dependant on income from transportation. The  philosophical move from taxation - where there is a charge with no  specific associated service beyond the safety net of society - to user  pays where the individual pays for a certain service, is a big shift in  society structure. Even if we know that taxation from transportation is  going down and what is ahead, we are still at the peak [of fuel tax  revenues]. So we are trying to change the system at the peak, and very  few business leaders succeed in doing that - and even fewer politicians.  
 
“We can’t give up [on  road user charging] and we have gained an  enormous advantage because  everybody in Finland is now aware of four  problems: the proportion of  emissions from transport and the cuts we  are required to make, that we  can no longer fund maintenance of the  roads and so we are creating a  debt for future generations at the rate  of €100 million per year. They  also know that in a context of a sector  worth €30bn a year in Finland  alone, we have only invested €1.5bn per  year in state-owned transport  infrastructure. This means we no longer  have the capacity to invest or  pay for new logistical outlets and we  can no longer enhance our  competitive advantage in logistics for our  industries. And finally, the  Finnish people are now well aware that  intelligence is needed in  transport systems and that data is part of  transport – a transport mode  in a certain sense.  
     
“So   even though we have not managed to bring in the user-pay model, we  have  been able to introduce, and with an element of shock, the real  problems.  We now have to find another solution and instead of having  the ministry  prepare studies, we have the parliament drafting measures  to be taken.  We have gone to the government and opposition parties and  said ‘you  didn’t approve of user-pay fees on roads and rail and  fairways but the  four questions are still there and we have to find  solutions’. 
     
“So  we have  joined together as a group and given ourselves one year to find   solutions. The challenge is that if we are not allowed to change   taxation systems on vehicles, how will we incentivise the reduction of   emissions. If not user-pay charges on infrastructure how will we pay for   investment, because tax cannot go up any more. And if we want to be   among the first to automated driving, how do we make sure our   intelligence in telecommunications or on the roads is sufficient.” 
     
According   to Berner, many people now are saying, ‘we should have had the courage   to investigate more and to study this’, and ‘maybe she was right and   there was something in what she said’. So the hope is that,   step-by-step, the parties will come closer to where they need to be. 
     
Parking   is another area where legislators, national and local, play a   significant role and there is an increasing body of evidence showing   that the provision of parking encourages commuting by car. Currently in   Finland every new apartment must have 1.5 parking spaces - so will that   change? 
     
“The role of   government is in finding intelligent ways in combining the usage of land   and the transport system. It is likely we will see less provision for   parking and more for shared use but we are a sparsely inhabited country   so the car will always be important. 
 
“It   is much more important to move ahead with incentives than with    punishments. Our incentives have to be that good and we have to be so    good at Mobility as a Service and at creating a service level that it    will convince people that they do not need to own or use a car. 
     
“A    trend to fewer cars will ease the need for parking provision, but in a    country like Finland we also have to incentivise people to live   outside  the cities. So before we can say ‘no more parking spaces’, we   have to  make sure there is a functioning last mile solution - and we   are not  there yet.” 
     
The    first/last mile conundrum returns the conversation to autonomous or    driverless vehicles and Berner echoes the UK’s House of Lords’ recent    findings, saying: “We do not yet fully understand the consequences of    autonomous cars – we are still missing the next level of ethical, moral    and liability issues. 
     
“If    you look back 200 or 300 years you had the church saying ‘this is not    ethical and will be bad for humans, or good for humans’. But we no    longer have that forum or one which is not the industry or politicians.    There needs to be something and sometimes I think the World Economic    Forum could be the place for that type of debate. 
     
“Completely    autonomous vehicles can benefit society but society will only benefit    from fully driverless [Level 5] technology in public transport where   you  can move 10 to 20 people on-demand in one autonomous vehicle, so  we   have to go for the highest level of ambition.” 
     
While    acknowledging the increase in road safety, she says: “If you have    autonomous cars moving with only one person inside, then society only    has a marginal benefit. Otherwise we only have people enjoying the    luxury of their cars and more cars on the road causing more congestion    and society does not benefit.” 
     
She    ends, almost where she started by reasserting: “We must provide the    space for technical development and then fix the problems that arise.  If   we solve them before they are really on the radar, then we will   prevent  development from happening."
    
        
        
        



