Skip to main content

Dutch move forward on road pricing

Companies are being invited to consult with the Dutch government on systems for road pricing. Camiel Eurlings, the Dutch Minister of Public Works, Transport and Water Management, said that he would like market parties to play a leading role in this process, which involves developing, together with businesses, certification requirements which the future road pricing system must meet.
July 6, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The Dutch government is moving forward on road pricing and motorists will be paying per all kilometres driven
Companies are being invited to consult with the Dutch government on systems for road pricing.

Camiel Eurlings, the Dutch Minister of Public Works, Transport and Water Management, said that he would like market parties to play a leading role in this process, which involves developing, together with businesses, certification requirements which the future road pricing system must meet.

The government will also examine how the market can set up a solid business case for its implementation. The market can then develop the system on its own, based on the certification requirements. There will also be a ‘guarantee track’.

Tendering will now begin for this fallback scenario, after which the system can be tested on a large scale.

Vehicle owners will be able to choose the service provider from which they obtain road pricing services. Tendering has began for several critical areas. These areas concern the components which form the heart of the system, needed for large-scale practical tests of the road pricing system in 2010. Tendering will take place by means of a ‘competitive dialogue’.

The main characteristic of this type of European tender procedure is that parts of the system (and with it their respective requirements) will be discussed in a competitive dialogue with a number of selected participants

The government decided late last year to introduce road pricing. Motorists will be paying per all kilometres driven. The price will depend on when and where the kilometres are driven as well as the environmental characteristics of the vehicle. Road pricing will eventually replace the motor vehicle tax (MRB) and purchase tax (BPM). The government has chosen this approach because it is based on the principle of fairness: those who drive more kilometres and pollute more pay more; those who drive little and pollute less pay less.

Related Content

  • Turkey is investing in new motorway and bridge projects
    May 29, 2013
    Turkey is benefiting from new motorway and bridge projects constructed along the BOT model - Gülay Malkoç. Looking at Turkey’s economic development, road construction plays a crucial role. The investment in Turkey is becoming increasingly attractive for both local and foreign investors. There are significant huge road investments and projects being made in Turkey at present, compared with EU countries where the roads need mostly repair and maintenance. According to the approach of Turkey’s Ministry of Trans
  • IRF Far East road safety training
    February 8, 2012
    For the past two decades, road safety advocates have faced an uphill battle of convincing governments of the very real epidemic of road fatalities and to invest resources to combat the carnage. And after several years of awareness campaigns, most, if not all, public road officials now agree that the world's roads must be safer.
  • Lowering construction machine exhaust emissions
    November 6, 2017
    The alternatives to diesel fuel as a power source continue to grow as firms move to cut emissions - Mike Woof writes. Only the most myopic could have failed to notice that times are changing in terms of engine technology. In the on-highway automotive sector as well as for the off-highway construction machine segment, manufacturers are looking to lower tailpipe emissions. Similar technologies have been employed in both on-highway and off-highway sectors, although those solutions have been adapted to better
  • Türkiye’s president Erdoğan opens the IRF World Congress
    December 13, 2024
    Türkiye’s president Erdoğan opened the IRF World Congress in Istanbul remotely.