 
     Traffic Quality Management Karl Ernst Ambrosch talks to ITS International about a new KPI-based methodology for assessing the efficacy of electronic toll collection schemes    
     
The debate over which is the ‘best’ solution for applications such as truck tolling is now years old. 
A decade or so ago, it was a rather straightforward discussion of DSRC versus GNSS (‘tag’ versus ‘satellite’) technology and the relative merits of thick- and thin-client OnBoard Units (OBUs). The intervening years have served to widen the issue, however, with hybridisation, increasingly sophisticated applications involving more than just corridor charging and smart devices all adding to the mix.
     
But there is more to a successful truck tolling scheme. Proponents on both sides of the now-legacy DSRC/GNSS debate will argue vehemently over capital and operational expenditures and the overall return on investment of the competing technologies while sometimes failing to appreciate the other factors with potential effects on success and profitability. And as the truck tolling environment has matured and become more sophisticated, we have seen the wider ITS sector move from research and development phase into live deployment. The emphasis is more on real-world procurements and how to justify them in budget-conscious conditions. 
 
The rise of KPIs
The application of key performance indicators (KPIs) has become an increasingly popular method of proving the worth of ITS investments but their success hinges on selecting the most appropriate performance criteria – that will demonstrate ‘success’ in the truest sense. It also relies on accurate performance data – something which is not always easy to come by.
     
Bratislava, Slovakia-based consultancy Traffic Quality Management (TQM) has just completed a KPI-based study of European truck tolling schemes. Entitled KENTTS – KPIs of European Nationwide Trucking Tolling Schemes, it looks at the relative performances of national schemes in seven European countries.
Karl Ernst Ambrosch, TQM’s managing director, says the  KENTTS study  grew out of his own background in quality management for  the road and  rail transport industries. The KPI approach used enables  comparisons  between quite complex Electronic Toll Collection (ETC)  schemes and can  be used both to influence how existing schemes evolve  and the choices  of solutions for schemes yet to be unveiled, he adds. 
     
“In   quality management you need to measure parameters related to quality   and permanent improvement of quality. Monitoring is needed if   optimisation is to be achieved. With something such as an ETC scheme,   there are complex, inter-relating issues and, as such, it’s not simply a   case of ‘turning the screw’ and expecting improvements to result.
     
“Since  the beginning of ETC there have been numerous attempts to compare the  different technological solutions and the trustworthiness of suppliers,  as well as the commercial and operational performances of nationwide  truck tolling schemes. We can’t, though, compare apples and oranges so a  methodology has to be found that can meaningfully compare systems which  are different by concept and in terms of technology, purpose, size,  framework and regional requirements. KPIs are an effective tool for  doing this.”
     
The various  aspects of an ETC scheme are shown in Figure 1.
     
 For truck tolling, other  parameters to be defined and considered include the region and network  subject to tolling and the tariff scheme. There is also the political  decision about whether fees collected are tolls or a tax (which in turn  dictates which organisation(s) can collect them and whether, in the case  of a toll, value-added tax applies). 
     
The  KENTTS study takes a novel approach by also using public socio-economic  data provided by the stakeholders’ ETC systems. KPIs are grouped under  four main ‘themes’: 
     
Financial Aspects; Set-up and Operation; System  Properties; and Socio-Economic. KENTTS focuses on the realisation phases  of a scheme – that is, the period from when a ‘go’ decision is taken on  a scheme’s implementation. This, Ambrosch explains, takes account of  the fact that the need to consult with all relevant stakeholders means  it can take several years to reach an initial decision.
     
“But  once a business model has been agreed and a tendering process has taken  place, we can usually expect deployment and go-live to take about a  year. It’s also important to have an information phase, such that both  stakeholders and customers know what to expect from the ETC scheme and  what their roles will be. Misunderstanding leads to obstacles and  delays, and delays mean cost in the form of additional effort and lost  revenue,” he states.
  
The KPIs themselves
 
 The  challenge for complex systems which exhibit non-linear behaviour is to  define the most relevant KPIs and the KENTTS study’s KPIs have been  defined from the viewpoint of a potential buyer, operator or  decision-maker. There are three KPIs relating to Financial Aspects - the  first being the percentage of toll evaders, and clearly a low figure is  desirable. The second is the ratio of the costs, capital and operating  expenditure, to annual income (figures which, Ambrosch notes, some  scheme operators work hard not to publicise too freely but which can be  had through persistence). The third relates to system price per network  length – a more sophisticated metric than mere network length as was  used in past comparisons.
     
In  setting up an ETC scheme, several of the most important aspects are  time related and a second group of three KPIs, for Set-Up and Operation,  deals with this. A fourth KPI relates to the time taken to set up a  scheme and the fifth to any delay in the start of operations. The sixth  relates to any enlargement of a scheme, whether geographically or in  numbers and types of vehicles using it. Enlargement while in operation  is challenging but a good performance figure can be arrived at by  describing planned enlargement as intended maximum network length  divided by initial network length. Higher percentages are preferred.
     
A  well-constructed ETC system should also be simple to use and therefore  encourage uptake - failure to achieve this adds both cost and  complexity. The KPIs relating to System Properties emphasise a lack of  complexity. The seventh KPI, for example, gives preference to tolling  schemes that do not need a parallel scheme (such as ETC plus manual toll  collection). The eighth looks at passive and active interoperability –  the number of countries in which bilateral and multilateral system  interoperability is possible or achievable, with higher numbers  preferred. The ninth considers the multilingual element, information  provision and accessibility for non-domestic users, and in doing so  rewards accessibility.
 
The  10th and final KPI, related to Socio-Economic Data, considers   operational efficiency. This, Ambrosch notes, is usually defined as the   relationship between income and collection effort but such an approach   does not take into account the variation between countries’ relative   economic strengths and the relationships between wages and the cost of   living. It costs more, for instance, to use tolled roads in Austria than   it does in Germany, so a straight comparison between the two is   difficult. KENTTS therefore uses a combination of the average toll rate   per kilometre and national GDP per month/per capita to give  standardised  and comparable values per 1,000km of travel with a higher  mileage  denoting a more affordable toll scheme in socio-economic terms.
     
To   allow comparison, each individual KPI is then normalised, with the   poorest-performing scheme providing a zero value and the best-performing   rated at 10. The others are then ranged between, and the same process   is repeated for each KPI.
 
First – and lasting – impressions
 
 For   the study of European truck tolling schemes it was important, given  the  relatively small number of suppliers of technology, to adopt a  neutral,  equidistant stance, says Ambrosch. As such, TQM approached the  KENTTS  study with no preconceptions of what constitutes a ‘good’  scheme; the  most important point was to come away from a  technology-centric position  and consider performance in a much wider  context. 
     
To  give but one  example, GNSS technology has matured to the point where an  argument  over whether DSRC is somehow better is irrelevant as the issue  is one  of application, not whether the technology ‘works’. Once in  operation,  GNSS technology works well… but GNSS schemes do have a  tendency to  suffer delays at the deployment stage and this leads to  lower scores in  the KENTTS study. 
     
“What   we have done is come up with an open-source method of evaluating ETC   schemes,” says Ambrosch. “It’s available to anyone who wants to use it,   although we also offer TQM’s expertise to those who want it. The KENTTS   study considers ETC truck tolling schemes from a given perspective but   there may be reason to consider schemes’ performance from the  viewpoint  of other stakeholders for whom different criteria, such as  environmental  impact, quality of life or commercial issues, may be more  important.
     
“But   whichever criteria are considered the most important, the overriding   aim should be a smoothly operating scheme which offers service on a 24/7   basis”
 
     
         
         
        



