Skip to main content

Future of road user charging: IRF convenes leaders’ roundtable for discussion

Charging for the use of roads is not a new practice, dating as far back as the 7th century BC, but its recent rate of expansion has been staggering.
April 6, 2020 Read time: 3 mins

 

By some estimates, the combined road pricing market for electronic road tolling, congestion pricing and road usage charging (RUC) is expected to grow from 196 million subscriptions in 2015, to more than 540 million by 2025. The drivers of this trend are multiple. They include the need to fund infrastructure investment and upkeep, tax road users for the “externalities” they generate, charge foreign vehicles using the national road system, and brace for the expected decline in fuel taxes with the modernisation of vehicle fleets.

The technologies supporting electronic road pricing services currently co-exist as separate ecosystems, frequently guided by economic considerations and national regulations rather than a thorough examination of the benefits each one provides. The growing appeal of electronic road tolling in emerging economies is encouraging road agencies to look at an even wider spectrum of technological responses, ranging from integration with mobile payment for private users, to combined services aimed at the fleet operator market.

The societal pressures we know today, increased population and economic activity around geographic hubs, will all worsen over the next decade, placing additional stress on transportation infrastructure and increasing commuting times, and demand management policies. The need to charge according to a growing number of parameters (such as location, destination and number of occupants) will become even more appealing to policymakers. For drivers, journey time will no longer be the only variable, since frequent trade-offs will need to be made between time and cost, possibly embedded within the vehicle’s navigation system. Increasingly, RUC applications will expand across jurisdictions, and reciprocal arrangements will progressively make way to unified RUC systems working off the same technological platform.

To take a measure of these trends and understand their wide-ranging implications for the North American market, the International Road Federation (IRF) convened senior specialists to join a Global Leadership Seminar held on November 19, 2019 as part of the 2nd IRF Global R2T Conference.

The seminar’s goals were to align understanding on current and future policy developments driving road user charging. They were also to address the technological and business outlook for road tolling, achieve consensus on how long-term mobility trends will likely impact the tolling market and outline opportunities to bridge knowledge gaps through educational resources.

One of the findings of the seminar was that RUC programs frequently affect the travel patterns of hundreds of thousands and can bring about important societal benefits that extend well beyond the funding equation. RUC partners now have the opportunity to take advantage of the dynamic data that is available to them through tolling applications via new data points such as vehicle health, and driver and driving data, which can provide value outside of traditional toll service provision, such as in the realm of road safety, telematics-based insurance, fleet management, or congestion analysis.

A new IRF White Paper summarising the main outputs of this seminar is now available from https://www.irf.global/irf-knowledge/

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Industry leaders to design national model for EV deployment
    March 21, 2012
    A new coalition of executives from blue chip companies in the US transportation and utility industries has come together to design a large-scale electric vehicle (EV) demonstration project that will help create a comprehensive national model for EV deployment.
  • Free flow tolling technology is booming
    April 10, 2013
    Jon Masters reports on the latest moves in the free-flow tolling segment. Free-flow tolling of roads and discrete infrastructure, such as bridges and tunnels, is an area of transportation that appears to be booming. Tolling in general is on the up, often still as a means for funding road projects where public sector budgets can no longer cover the necessary costs, but not exclusively so. Several high profile examples of road user charging for ‘demand management’ – the reduction of congestion as part of a wi
  • Transport corridors to help deliver shared prosperity
    September 28, 2018
    Leading actors set the stage at the European Road Conference, October 22nd -24th in Dubrovnik, Croatia South East Europe is at an important crossroads in the development of its transport connectivity programs, securing a critical role as a gateway for international trade routes. At a time of growing motorisation, the region’s network of roads and highways is currently its largest public asset. However, significant challenges remain to enhance the safety, efficiency, environmental sustainability and re
  • ERF welcomes European Commission’s consultation on charging for the use of infrastructure
    January 2, 2013
    That roads are essential for Europe’s prosperity is something no policymaker in their right mind would deny Roads have a major impact on our daily lives, as it is one of the primary means of access to employment, services, and social activities. Moreover, by linking people and other modes of transport, they are a sine qua non for achieving greater cohesion within Europe. In light of this, it is somehow hard to believe how long it has taken policymakers to wake up to an inconvenient truth. This is that chr