Skip to main content

Asian forum calls for vehicle quotas

The seventh Regional Environmentally Sustainable Transport (EST) Forum in Asia, held in Bali, concluded with a commitment by Asian countries to implement sustainable transportation systems with the signing of the Bali Declaration on Vision Three Zeros — Zero Congestion, Zero Pollution and Zero Accidents. The international forum welcomed representatives from across Asia, as well as international organisations, bilateral and multilateral agencies, research organisations and sustainable transportation professi
April 29, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
The seventh Regional Environmentally Sustainable Transport (EST) Forum in Asia, held in Bali, concluded with a commitment by Asian countries to implement sustainable transportation systems with the signing of the Bali Declaration on Vision Three Zeros — Zero Congestion, Zero Pollution and Zero Accidents.

The international forum welcomed representatives from across Asia, as well as international organisations, bilateral and multilateral agencies, research organisations and sustainable transportation professionals.

5466 Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP) founder and managing director for policy Michael Replogle underlined that the implementation of a vehicle quota system was among several crucial sustainable transportation measures to realise Vision Three Zeros.

“The automotive industry has a lot of political and economic power in Indonesia. I think every place that is dealing with this issue has to deal with the politics in its own way. It takes political leadership,” he said. “Shanghai, for example, is a major centre of vehicle manufacturing, yet it was the first city in China to adopt a motor vehicle quota. And they have succeeded; over the past 15-20 years, they have been able to limit the growth of traffic to half of what it would have been had they pursued a non-managed motorised vehicle policy.”

He also cited China’s capital, Beijing, known for its horrendous traffic congestion, which has in the past year adopted a motor vehicle quota, while India’s government has also taken steps to encourage larger cities to adopt a vehicle quota system and traffic management system.

After decades of heavy reliance on roads and motorised vehicles as Indonesia’s backbone of land transportation, Deputy Transportation Minister Bambang Susantono acknowledged that it was time for cities nationwide to develop integrated transportation systems that did not solely depend on roads.

Citing World Bank data showing that Indonesia’s medium-sized cities with populations above 500,000 displayed the greatest economic growth, of around seven per cent annually, Bambang added: “We are accelerating the development of mass transportation systems in our fourteen major cities and will soon adopt the same measures in other medium-sized cities.”

Bali initiated its own integrated mass transportation system, called Trans Sarbagita, in late 2011. The system recorded 2,886 passengers daily in 2012, and is estimated to have reduced the number of motorcycles roaming the roads of southern Bali by 1,449 per day.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • IBTTA Summit: satellite tolling is the future
    August 15, 2019
    IBTTA members met in Florida to consider the technological changes that will impact their businesses – including satellite tolling. Colin Sowman reports from Orlando Over decades, the technology employed in toll collection has been honed to near perfection – automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) and radio frequency identification (RFID) tags are easily within a couple of per cent of infallibility even at highway speeds. However, technical innovations beyond the confines of the toll road cannot b
  • Federal Signal supplies all the elements of end to end tolling
    January 31, 2012
    Manfred Rietsch, group president of Federal Signal Technologies (FST), talks about the recent acquisitions forming FST and the organisation's plans for the future. "Our philosophy is going to be about open access" Federal Signal has been on a buying spree. An energetic policy of acquisition over the past few months has seen the company reposition itself as an end-to-end provider of Electronic Toll Collection (ETC) systems with what it states is a portfolio of proven, best-in-class technologies which will al
  • FOTsis targets ‘socially inclusive’ cooperative ITS
    December 5, 2013
    The FOTsis project addresses the imbalances between the vehicular and infrastructure sides of cooperative ITS infrastructures and looks to ensure road operators can help to enrich future technology applications. By Jason Barnes. Several developments have conspired to push the vehicular side of cooperative infrastructures/cooperative ITS to the fore in recent years. The automotive industry’s rather shorter product development and lifecycles combined with economic slowdown in many regions gave rise to the not
  • All around the world: #ITSDubai2024
    September 5, 2024
    The bosses of the three major international ITS organisations – ITS America, Ertico and ITS Asia-Pacific – have put their heads together on a podcast. Beate Kubitz listens in…