Skip to main content

UK puts £3bn into new bus strategy

Daily fare caps, plus better coordination of multimodal services, are promised
By Adam Hill March 16, 2021 Read time: 3 mins
The UK government wants better bus services to be part of the post-Covid recovery (© ITS International)

The UK government has announced it is to put £3 billion into a new bus strategy in England, designed to make services more reliable, coordinated and - with the introduction of electric and hydrogen buses - green.

In what it calls "the most ambitious shake-up of the bus sector in a generation", the strategy is designed to produce cheaper, simpler flat fares in towns and cities, greater frequency - and what it claims will be "new flexible services to reconnect communities".

Many in the industry have welcomed the move, but critics are cautious and suggest that more detail on how these services are going to be organised is needed, and that more government money may be required.

The government's overarching idea is that the new measures will encourage more people to use the bus, rather than their private car, as the country recovers from the Covid-19 pandemic. 

It hopes to attract them by providing simpler bus fares with daily price caps, an increase in evening and weekend services, the roll-out of contactless payments and hundreds of miles of new bus lanes.

In a statement, it adds: "We expect to see local authorities and operators working together to deliver bus services that are so frequent that passengers can just ‘turn up and go’ – no longer needing to rely on a traditional timetable and having the confidence they won’t wait more than a few minutes."

The country's bus network outside the capital, London, has been deregulated since the 1980s - and the government implicitly admits via its new strategy that this approach has not been successful.

It bemoans the resulting fragmentation and wants local councils and operators to enter what it calls 'enhanced partnerships' or franchising agreements.

Despite the eye-catching headline cash investment, the success of the government's strategy is therefore going to depend on how well private operators and public authorities work together to provide services that local communities actually need.

In rural and suburban areas, the Department for Transport is giving £20 million to trials of on-demand services – such as minibuses booked via an app – where a traditional bus service is not appropriate.

Crucially, the new strategy also looks at integrating services and ticketing across all transport modes, so people can easily move from bus to train - something that is in place already in London.

A key driver for the new plan is to accelerate the transition to greener and more sustainable transport, prime minister Boris Johnson says.

He has pledged to deliver 4,000 new British-built electric or hydrogen buses and to end the sale of diesel buses.

"Buses are lifelines and liberators, connecting people to jobs they couldn’t otherwise take, driving pensioners and young people to see their friends, sustaining town centres and protecting the environment," Johnson says.

"As we build back from the pandemic, better buses will be one of our first acts of levelling up."

Transport secretary Grant Shapps said bus services across England "are patchy, and it’s frankly not good enough".

"The quality of bus service you receive shouldn’t be dependent on where you live. Everyone deserves to have access to cheap, reliable and quick bus journeys."

He concluded that local authorities would need to play a major role: "We will provide unprecedented funding, but we need councils to work closely with operators, and the government, to develop the services of the future."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Transport Systems Catapult boss: ‘We can’t build our way out of congestion’
    March 4, 2019
    The UK Transport Systems Catapult’s CEO Paul Campion talks to Colin Sowman about helping companies develop tomorrow’s solutions – and explains why you can never build your way to empty roads The future of mobility is going to be driven by services.” That’s the opening position of Paul Campion, CEO of the Transport Systems Catapult (TSC) – the UK government organisation set up to help boost transport-related employment and the economy. Campion was previously with IBM and describes himself as a ‘techno o
  • London’s strategy to tackle air quality problems
    October 21, 2014
    Colin Sowman talks to Matthew Pencharz, the man charged with charting London’s path between catering for traveller needs, conserving ancient buildings and conforming to modern air quality standards.
  • Pivot Power: 'We need to rethink the EV customer experience'
    October 10, 2018
    Electric vehicles will increasingly become a key part of the mobility mix but charging infrastructure is currently patchy. Adam Hill talks to Matt Allen of Pivot Power about disruption, horses, slot machines – and the importance of customer experience. Electric vehicles (EVs) – including buses, taxis and cars for individual and shared use – are already a common sight on our roads. They are not yet ubiquitous. But that will come. There will be around 30 million electric cars in the world by 2030 (as they
  • The challenging European road to carbon neutrality and the need for distance-based charging
    November 1, 2023
    Fuel taxes are falling and EVs have the potential to create social equity issues. The answer may lie in expanding the use of technology which has successfully been used for two decades with trucks