Skip to main content

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
February 9, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
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 highlighted it would be introduced if governments were confident that the benefits to the community of the new arrangements outweighed the costs.

Infrastructure Australia chief executive Philip Davies is a confirmed speaker at NeTC 2017 and has previously described the current funding model to build and maintain Australian roads as unfair, inefficient and unsustainable. The Australian Infrastructure Plan advocated for fuel excise and registration fees to be abolished in favour of a user-pays approach to road funding where the revenue raised from road users is put back into building and maintaining transport infrastructure.

According to ITS Australia CEO Susan Harris, Australia was one of the first adopters of electronic tolling and since then has exported products and intellectual property to the international market.

NeTC 2017 is sponsored by Cubic Transportation Systems, 600 Transurban, 81 Kapsch, 108 Q-Free and 6722 Roads and Maritime Services (RMS). The Forum theme, Converging Smarter Tolling Technologies will cover road user charging, as well as road tolling, including new projects, infrastructure maintenance, collection and analysis of big data, new technologies and smart cities.

Attendees will also have the opportunity to attend technical tours and networking events.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ITS needs continuity at the policy-making level
    February 1, 2012
    ITS needs to be sold to politicians in plainer terms and we need to be encouraging greater continuity at the policy-making level says Josef Czako, chairman of the IRF's Policy Committee on ITS. At the ITS World Congress in New York in 2008, the International Road Federation (IRF) held the inaugural meeting of its Policy Committee on ITS. The Policy Committee's formation, says its chairman, Kapsch's Josef Czako, reflects an ongoing concern over the lack of deployment of ITS technology on roads in anything li
  • Suppliers chosen for ODOT road user charging project
    January 28, 2015
    Oregon’s Department of Transportation (ODOT) has preliminarily chosen Sanef, Verizon and telematics company Azuga as vendors in the nation’s first large scale pay-by the mile road usage charge (RUC) program, according to Michelle Godfrey, the program’s public affairs officer. Sanef was selected as the ODOT account manager to provide full turnkey mileage reporting and account management equipment and operations. The company served as the account manager in Oregon’s earlier pilot project. Verizon, alon
  • Smart transportation market worth $104.19 billion by 2019
    April 1, 2014
    MarketsandMarkets recently conducted a study on the Smart Transportation Market by Solutions (Ticketing Management, Parking Management, Passenger Information, Traffic Management) & Services (Cloud, Professional, Business) Global Advancements, Application Roadmaps - Forecasts and Analysis 2014-2019, which concludes that the smart transportation market is expected to grow from US$45.05 billion in 2014 to US$104.19 billion by 2019. Congestion, emergence of cloud services, need of sustainable solutions, and
  • US enforcement regulation to deliver clearer guidelines?
    February 2, 2012
    Jim Tuton of American Traffic Solutions looks at the evolution of automated enforcement in North America "Technological regulation will become more sophisticated at the federal level, giving states clearer guidelines" Jim Tuton In just 20 years, photo enforcement in North America has grown from a single speed camera in a small town in Arizona to thousands of photo traffic enforcement cameras which are now operating in 350 communities spread across 27 states and three Canadian provinces. Most of these p