Skip to main content

LGA report forecasts introduction of road tolling

A report by the Local Government Association (LGA), the organisation representing councils in England and Wales, predicts road tolling or pay as you drive road pricing could be introduced by 2018. With traffic predicted to nearly double over the next 25 years, the LGA believes the Government will have to consider tolls or even pay as you drive road pricing to raise the money it needs.
November 27, 2012 Read time: 3 mins

A report by the 6932 Local Government Association (LGA), the organisation representing councils in England and Wales, predicts road tolling or pay as you drive road pricing could be introduced by 2018.

With traffic predicted to nearly double over the next 25 years, the LGA believes the Government will have to consider tolls or even pay as you drive road pricing to raise the money it needs.

Ministers are looking at ways to attract investment into the road network and one option under consideration would see the 503 Highways Agency privatised on similar lines to the water and electricity industry.  The Government is due to publish the results of a joint Treasury-1837 Department for Transport review into the major road network within weeks.

The LGA says the challenge facing the Government is that attracting private investment is seen as requiring an income stream from the motorist to the operator to provide a return on investment.  This, it says could involve linking vehicle excise and fuel duties more closely to road use or even some form of pay as you drive road charging – “requiring some form of surveillance.” Any changes, the LGA says, could be introduced in 2018.

The LGA is the latest organisation to suggest that road pricing is unavoidable, even though the policy was ditched by the last Labour Government following a voter backlash.

Road pricing has been backed by the 4961 RAC Foundation and the CBI, which recommended the privatisation of Britain’s motorways and major A roads in October.

The LGA’s analysis comes as the Government confirmed it was ready to introduce tolling on an improved twenty-mile section of the A14, a key transport artery linking the Midlands and major ports in East Anglia.

At the same time, plans are already in place for a wave of new “free flowing” tolling schemes – such as the Dartford Crossing, where motorists would pay to use stretches of road via the internet or mobile phone.

Underpinning the need to raise more cash from motorists is not only the need to find money for road repairs and tackling congestion but also a feared black hole in the Treasury’s finances.

Earlier this year the Office of Budget responsibility, which advises George Osborne, warned that the trend towards more fuel efficient cars could lead to the Government’s tax take from drivers being £600 million less in 2014 than previously anticipated.

Related Content

  • Civil engineers find fuel savings where the rubber meets the road
    May 23, 2012
    A new study by civil engineers at MIT shows that using stiffer pavements on America’s roads could reduce vehicle fuel consumption by as much as three per cent, that could add up to 273 million barrels of crude oil per year, or US$15.6 billion at today’s oil prices. This would result in an accompanying annual decrease in CO2 emissions of 46.5 million metric tons.
  • The great pay divide
    April 2, 2014
    Public acceptance is crucial for the acceptance of managed and express lanes as Jon Masters discovers. Lists of proposed highway expansion projects introducing variably priced toll lanes continue to lengthen. Managed lanes, or express lanes to some, are gaining support as a politically favourable way of adding capacity and reducing acute congestion on principal highways. In Florida, for example, the managed lanes on the 95 Express are claimed to have significantly increased average peak-time speeds on tolle
  • New partnership aims to make roads safer for motorcyclists
    November 23, 2016
    Highways England, the company responsible for running over 4000 miles of England’s motorways and major trunk roads, is to become the third partner in a collaboration to improve motorcycle rider safety. The government-owned company will join the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) and the Motorcycle Industry Association (MCIA) as an equal partner in facilitating practical changes to roads, as detailed in a jointly written whitepaper: Realising the Motorcycling Opportunity: A Motorcycle Safety and Trans
  • Truck CO2 standards ‘must be part of Government CO2 reduction policy’
    July 4, 2016
    In response to the UK Government’s Fifth Carbon Budget, Freight on Rail says that the Department for Transport must support EU plans to introduce CO2 truck standards to bring HGVs into line with cars and vans. In the UK, HGVs contribute 17 per cent of surface transport’s CO2 emissions even though it only makes up five per cent of road miles driven. Philippa Edmunds, Freight on Rail manager, Campaign for Better Transport said CO2 standards and reduction targets for HGVs are long overdue as truck manufac