Skip to main content

ITS Australia welcomes APC and ACCC statements on ITS

Recent statements by the Australian Productivity Commission and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission encouraging the exploration of intelligent transport systems (ITS) technologies to tackle transport challenges have been warmly welcomed by ITS Australia.
August 13, 2014 Read time: 3 mins

 Recent statements by the Australian Productivity Commission and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission encouraging the exploration of intelligent transport systems (ITS) technologies to tackle transport challenges have been warmly welcomed by 858 ITS Australia.

The Productivity Commission inquiry Report on Public Infrastructure recommended that the Australian Government actively encourage State and Territory Governments to undertake pilot studies on the use of vehicle telematics for distance and location road charging for cars and other light vehicles.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) recommended that congestion pricing should be on the table in any debate over further economic reform. The ACCC believes that unlike other parts of the economy, the prices paid by road users do not reflect the economic cost of using roads.

ITS Australia chief executive officer Susan Harris said that ITS can now support a much more sophisticated approach to charging for road use, which is more closely matched to actual usage.  

“Traditional approaches of registration fees and fuel excise have worked to a point, but we now have the technology to support a fairer, more sophisticated approach that will deliver community safety and efficiency benefits,” she said.

“ITS can also increase the productivity of roads. Existing roads in Australia now carry more traffic than ever with the aid of electronic traffic management systems. This is thanks to systems such as ramp metering, variable speed signs, ramp signals, traffic light coordination, in-car GPS and others.

“When new roads are built, ITS tools built into the new infrastructure maximise the return on the community’s investment. By better managing traffic, these systems also make roads safer,” Harris continued.

The Productivity Commission said that more direct charging of light vehicles has the potential to provide a better road system for motorists, if combined with reforms that hypothecate the revenue to road provision as a price for a service.

The Commission considers that the best way forward is for the State and Territory Governments to use the opportunity created by developments in vehicle telematics to trial direct charging for light vehicles across their road networks.

The report recommends report that the Australian Government should offer to partly fund these pilot studies and work with the States and Territories to address privacy concerns and share lessons from the trials and overseas experience. It also recommends that motorists are directly involved via roads and motorists associations.

“ITS Australia welcomes the Productivity Commission and the ACCC recommendations to support the use of technology to more effectively manage congestion and road user charging. We now have access to proven, low cost technologies to support distance and location based charging.  The move to distance and location based charging provides a framework to increase both the safety and efficiency of our road network,” said Harris.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Machine vision’s image of road management’s future
    June 11, 2015
    Q-Free’s Marco Sinnema looks at how the commoditisation of high-quality vision-based solutions is widening their application. Machine vision technology’s entry into the ITS/traffic management sector has followed a classic top-down path. This is unsurprising given the extremely demanding performance criteria which are the standard in its market of origin, manufacturing processing. Very high image qualities combined with frame rates often in the hundreds per second range resulted in vision systems with capabi
  • Smart parking trial begins in Canberra
    November 10, 2015
    The Australian Capital Territory (ACT) Government is to carry out a smart parking trial in part of Manuka starting in the first quarter of 2016. UK company Smart Parking will deliver the project using its SmartPark solution and construction is to begin in early November. A successful review of the pilot could then see further sensors installed across the rest of the city. The initial year long contract will see Smart Parking deploy 460 in-ground sensors which use infrared technology to detect when a park
  • Smart communities require 5G, says Samsung Electronics America
    January 11, 2019
    A community has to have 5G in order to be a smart community, which means having a regulatory environment which is conducive to investment. This was among the key messages at 5G and Self-Driving Vehicles: A Policy Roadmap at this week’s Consumer Electronics Show 2019 in las Vegas, US. John Godfrey, senior vice president, public policy, at Samsung Electronics America, said communities have a role to play in partnering with the private sector in using 5G. “A way to improve to improve the safety of s
  • ITS ‘could save Australia US$500 million a year’
    February 22, 2013
    According to Australia’s federal infrastructure and transport minister, Anthony Albanese, an Australia-wide electronic freeway management system has the potential to greatly reduce congestion and save Australian families and businesses more than US$500 million a year. Albanese said as much as he announced the US$21 million contract to deliver an Intelligent Transport System (ITS) and communications infrastructure to the Westgate freeway managed motorway project in Victoria under the national smart managed m