Skip to main content

IBTTA Dublin: RUC acceptance 'crucial'

Transport Infrastructure Ireland RUC head Geraldine Walsh says road user charging is key
By Adam Hill October 25, 2022 Read time: 1 min
Walsh: "It's essential that we reach out to everyone and communicate"

Road user charging (RUC) has the potential to be key in getting people out of their cars, encouraging modal shift and decarbonising Ireland's road network.

That was one of the observations from Geraldine Walsh, head of RUC, Transport Infrastructure Ireland (TII), on the first day of IBTTA's Global Tolling Summit in Dublin during a session on equity of access to transportation services.

Running through the Bruce (Better Road User Charging Experience) project carried out by TII, Walsh said there was no desire to add to Ireland's existing motorway network.

Instead, new ways of handling capacity issues must be found, she added.

"Political and public acceptance will be crucial for the success of RUC," Walsh said. "It's essential that we reach out to everyone and communicate."

"We want to learn from international experience - other countries, other agencies who've done this before."

People's travel choices are "individual, adaptive and often complex", admitted Patrick Andison, senior consultant, integrated city planning, at Arup, during the same session.

"We have to take that into account when we're designing solutions."

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Foundation funds research for informed campaigning
    April 29, 2015
    ITS International talks to Professor Stephen Glaister, director of the transport research and lobbying organisation, the RAC Foundation. It is through the eyes of an economist that Professor Stephen Glaister, emeritus professor of transport and infrastructure at Imperial College London and director of the RAC Foundation, views current and future transport problems. Having spent 30 years at the London School of Economics and another 10 at Imperial, the move to the RAC Foundation was a radical departure from
  • Bill Shuster to headline IBTTA Transportation and Finance Summit
    March 8, 2016
    Bill Shuster, chairman of the United States House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, will lead a notable list of political and policy experts when he addresses the International Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association's (IBTTA) Transportation Policy and Finance Summit, 14 and 15 March 14-15 at the Washington Marriott Georgetown in Washington, D.C. The meeting is co-hosted by IBTTA local members; the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, the Transurban Group and the Virginia Department of
  • Transport in the round
    October 13, 2015
    The ITF’s Mary Crass tells Colin Sowman why future transport demands will require governments to overcome the silo effect of individual single-modal authorities. The only global multimodal transport policy organisation,” is how Mary Crass describes the International Transport Forum (ITF), which is housed at the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). As head of policy and summit preparation at the ITF she says: “All other organisations are either regional or have a modal focus, we cove
  • Australian road pricing, road funding needs more debate
    January 31, 2012
    Everyone in the road transport industry in Australia is talking road pricing - everyone, that is, except the politicians. Christine Keyes reports. At the end of 2008, Australia's road transport industry was wringing its collective hands, unable to raise more than $100 million from an individual bank for any Public Private Partnership (PPP). The A$750 million Peninsula Link project, announced by the Victoria Government in March 2009, was the first road project in the country to be put out to market as an ava