 
     Vinci’s André Broto presented his views on how the tolling industry could play an important role in helping authorities ease urban congestion, to delegates at the IBTTA conference.     
     
As director of foresight and strategy at 
     
Vinci Autoroutes is a leading motorway operator with some 4,350km (2,700 miles) of motorways in France which handle more than 2.25 million transactions every day - but many of its concessions will begin coming to an end from around 2030 depending on the different contracts. With the EU refining its definition of toll concessions, these cannot last beyond the point at which the investment has been repaid and the operator has made a proper return on its investment. So this situation is likely to become increasingly common across the EU.
     
It is against that background that Broto has been looking ahead to consider what the future may hold and how the tolling sector can participate. 
     
Currently the recovering economies have led to an increase in peak period traffic volumes in many countries, and with it an increase in congestion – especially in the main business centres usually in the heart of major cities.    
Broto used Paris as an example and his approach was to determine the root causes of congestion in the city by analysing changes in the population distribution and their travel patterns.  He told delegates: “The problem is not the casual long-distance trip of 100km or more or the everyday short trips up to 5km, it is the regular commuting trips between 10 and 50km. France does not usually have a problem on intercity toll roads, which all stop some distance from the city centre, but on the peri-urban free roads.”
 
Broto illustrated this by showing analysis of the commuting area in and around Paris which he defined as covering 12,000km2 and containing 11million inhabitants. At 86km2 the centre of the city is small and has a population of around 2 million people while the surrounding inner suburbs are more than seven times bigger (at 660km2) and house twice as many people. However, there was an even bigger jump to the outer suburbs which are spread over the surrounding 11,000km2 and are home to the remaining 5 million inhabitants.
Analysis of vehicle use in and around Paris shows that the average trip  length for leisure, schooling and shopping is relatively constant (at  5-8km) regardless of the distance from the city centre. Commuting  distance, on the other hand, rises substantially as the distance from  the city centre increases (from 5km for city centre dwellers to an  average of 25km for people living 50km from the centre). 
     
“The commuting  area around Paris has increased from from 25km, more or less 40 years  ago to today’s 60 or 70km,” said Broto.
     
“The  main cause of the congestion is the commuting trips once a day for  those people, and not only for Paris but also for a number of other  cities and big towns.”
     
Considered  from the user’s point of view he said the challenge was: “mobility for  commuting trips at an affordable cost in relation with the income of the  household.” Adding: “This is a problem of social acceptance.”
     
     
 
 For  the authority the he summarised the challenge as: “To provide an  offer  of mobility and to maintain the infrastructure at a sustainable  cost for  the community.
     
“If  we  [the tolling industry] can help solve those two problems we will  have a  better social acceptance as a concessionaire company and as a   consequence have better political support,” he said, and the posed the   question: “how can toll roads contribute to this objective?”
     
His   first advice is to view the topic from the people perspective and not   the vehicle perspective. Addressing his audience he said: “Our annual   reports are full of figures concerning the vehicle perspective but very   few from the people perspective,” and then highlighted Madrid’s   commuting area as an example of what could be achieved.
     
“There   are seven motorways which are related to a circular metro line and   there are a lot of buses on those motorways. On average each motorway   has 2,000 long-distance buses per day dedicated to commuting trips so   there are 50,000 people coming by bus on each motorway. There are also   very good interchanges between the buses and the metro line.”
     
 According   to Broto, the key to achieving this is a transition from the  individual  authorities “working in a silo” to working with other  transportation  authorities to enable planning coordination between road  and rail  networks. “The focus must be on a multimodal perspective and  not a  mono-modal perspective.
 
“But   there is another finding in the Madrid case. That we should  change our   focus from building new infrastructure to improving the use  of the   existing infrastructure. They [Madrid] are using the existing    infrastructure instead of building new lanes.”
     
He    summarise the solution to help the commuters in the outer suburbs by    saying: “We do not need extra capacity on the motorways, just buses on    existing lanes because generally speaking there is no congestion.  Where   there is congestion we may need additional capacity by HOV [high    occupancy vehicle] or HOT [high occupancy/toll] lanes but more    importantly we should have intermodal interchanges with the mass rapid    transit system. It is not necessary to bring the people right into the    city centre when you have a very good mass rapid transit system: just    stop and put people on the metro.”
     
Turning    to the audience’s main areas of interest, he said the question   remained  about how to finance mobility needs in peri-urban areas and   this could  include public funding where that is possible. Imposing a   tax or a toll  on heavy vehicles is an option but in the case of France   the much  publicised Ecotax was scrapped so there is no possibility of   funding  from that area. 
     
Cordon    tolling was also possible but Broto said that for political reasons   the  mayors of many cities are unwilling to sanction such systems.  
     
Instead    he proposed incorporating congested free-use urban motorways into    existing intercity concessions. These adopted roads would remain free to    use while their running costs and maintenance would be funded from  the   main concession. He cited the city of Toulon in Southern France  which   has 12km of free urban motorway along which there were tunnels  that   require widening to increase capacity – a project which could not  be   financed from the public budget. Therefore the authority asked the    existing concessionaire to take charge of this section of the road,  to   maintain it free of tolls and to also find the €600million needed  for   its operation and widening. This was done by extending the  duration of   the concession on the inter-urban sections of the entire  motorway.
     
He   believes  such a model could be repeated elsewhere. “The tolls  collected  on  interurban motorways could be used to meet the funding  needs of  urban  motorways,” he concluded.
 
     
         
         
        



