Skip to main content

Australians ‘open to a fairer, more sustainable road funding system’

Australia’s first real-world trial of road charging options has found that motorists are open to a different way of paying for the nation’s roads. Transurban chief executive officer Scott Charlton said the first stage of the Melbourne Road Usage Study suggested a user-pays system could work in Australia, providing fair, sustainable and flexible funding for the infrastructure. The 18-month study, led by Transurban and supported by independent research and technology specialists, looked at how people used
September 12, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Australia’s first real-world trial of road charging options has found that motorists are open to a different way of paying for the nation’s roads. 600 Transurban chief executive officer Scott Charlton said the first stage of the Melbourne Road Usage Study suggested a user-pays system could work in Australia, providing fair, sustainable and flexible funding for the infrastructure.

The 18-month study, led by Transurban and supported by independent research and technology specialists, looked at how people used their cars on Melbourne’s road network under different charging options. The trial involved a representative sample of Melbourne car owners installing a small GPS device in their vehicles and providing important insights at regular intervals throughout the study period. More than 1,600 drivers drove 12 million kilometres under a range of charging options, including charge per kilometre, charge per trip and a flat rate. A second trial is currently under way, testing participants’ response to cordon and time of day congestion-based charging options.

Changing the way Australia pays for its roads has been talked about for more than a decade and is a challenge many other countries are confronting. The growing popularity of fuel-efficient cars and the arrival of affordable electric vehicles mean that fuel excise, Australia’s main source of road funding, is forecast to diminish. According to CSIRO modelling, Australia may be looking at a reduction of up to 45 per cent in the revenue it needs to build and maintain its roads by 2050.

Related Content

  • February 9, 2017
    Road user charging top of the agenda for NeTC 2017
    Registrations are now open and the programme released for Asia Pacific’s annual tolling event, the 2017 National electronic Tolling Committee (NeTC) Forum. Hosted by ITS Australia in Sydney, 23-25 May, 120 Australian and international speakers and participants are expected to attend and road user charging is high on the agenda. Last November, Paul Fletcher, Federal Minister for Urban Infrastructure announced a study into road user charging, as recommended in Infrastructure Australia’s 15 Year Plan, and h
  • March 18, 2014
    Transurban announces preferred contractor for NorthConnex
    Melbourne-based toll-road operator Transurban Group has announced that the consortium Lend Lease Bouygues is set to design and build the Sydney, Australia, NorthConnex tunnel link between the M1 and M2 motorways in the city’s northwest. The nine kilometre, 80 km/h tolled link involves two motorway tunnels, built with a three lane capacity for future growth but initially marked for two lanes each way. It provides the missing link in the National Highway Network and offers a safe and more efficient way of
  • October 10, 2013
    Progress in talks on new Sydney toll road
    Toll roads operator Transurban says it has made good progress in its talks with the New South Wales government on a US$2.5 billion tunnel proposal for Sydney's north. The proposed project would be a tolled motorway linking the M1 Pacific Motorway, formerly the F3 freeway, at Wahroonga to the M2 toll road at West Pennant Hills. The project involves the construction of new eight kilometre tunnel, which would be the longest tunnel of its kind in Australia. “We have made significant progress in our disc
  • February 1, 2012
    Infrastructure funding and road user charging – debate continues
    Jack Opiola provides an overview of the ongoing debate over US infrastructure funding and the progress – or lack of it – towards vehicles miles travelled road user charging. The future funding of transportation and mobility infrastructure is attracting increased attention. There has been sharp debate in the US, where landmark reports from the National Surface Transportation Infrastructure Financing Commission and the National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission both stated that the cu