Skip to main content

Road charging the way forward for road funding?

Major changes will be required in the way that highway infrastructure investment is funded in many developed nations. Fuel taxation is a key source of income for governments, with some countries (such as the US) using a set sum for road repairs, maintenance and new construction. Fuel taxation is a proportional way to fund road infrastructure improvements, basically as larger vehicles or those that are used more, will pay more.
May 23, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Major changes will be required in the way that highway infrastructure investment is funded in many developed nations. Fuel taxation is a key source of income for governments, with some countries (such as the US) using a set sum for road repairs, maintenance and new construction. Fuel taxation is a proportional way to fund road infrastructure improvements, basically as larger vehicles or those that are used more, will pay more.

But looking ahead, this model has to change. Fuel taxation cannot fund the future infrastructure investment required. The US for example has a major shortfall in terms of income for its Highway Trust Fund and methods such as fuel tax increases, tolling and PPPs have been proposed as alternatives. In European countries fuel taxes have been used by governments for the total national budget, with only a tiny proportion being used for road infrastructure, resulting in highway funding problems.

The situation will get worse too. New generation vehicles use less fuel, so taxation from fuel will diminish. And looking further ahead, the shrinking oil reserves will see the end of fossil fuelled vehicles.

Tolling has been used to pay for roads for hundreds of years and provides a direct route to further investment. It is no coincidence that developing highway networks in Brazil, North Africa or Russia are tolled. Tolling is also being used to fund highway projects in developed European nations, such as Austria and France. But trying to introduce tolling to existing highways faces public resistance.

Trucks using the German autobahn network are charged for the distances they cover on these highways. This is seen as an effective tool for highway funding, particularly as it is the trucks that cause the greatest road wear. But increasing the cost of haulage boosts the cost of goods. Furthermore, trucking firms in Germany now route vehicles onto B roads for shorter journeys, which largely feature single traffic lanes in either direction. Concern has been raised over road safety, particularly given the increased numbers of Eastern European trucks on the country's roads and their often poor levels of roadworthiness.

Road user charging for all vehicles has also been proposed in the UK and the Netherlands, both of which suffer extremely high concentrations of vehicles on their roads. But the complexity of the technology required presents a major barrier and nor is this solution popular with the public.

But while road users may not be happy with the need to change the status quo, there is little choice. Highway infrastructure investment will have to be sourced from other methods.

Related Content

  • Vitronic wins contract for enforcement technology for French truck toll system
    March 21, 2012
    German company Vitronic has been selected by Thales group to supply key components for all fixed enforcement gantries for the nationwide truck charging system to be implemented on 15,000 km of French roads. The multi-million euro contract is part of the prestigious Ecotaxe project, a distance-based tax for trucks. From mid-2013 onwards, all vehicles over 3.5 tons in weight will have to pay a tax on national roads with the fee being collected by means of an onboard GPS satellite system.
  • FIA Region I cautiously welcomes European Parliament transport report
    July 16, 2015
    The European Parliament’s Transport and Tourism (TRAN) Committee voted to approve a report evaluating the implementation of the European Commission’s 2011 White Paper on Transport. The document outlines the priorities and directions that the TRAN Committee would like to see the Commission take as they continue the consultation process for the revision of the White Paper on Transport. The Parliament’s position is that consumers must be at the heart of all transport policy initiatives. FIA Region I, a cons
  • Raised Stockholm congestion charge to finance metro extension?
    October 15, 2013
    In Sweden, the right wing majority governing the county of Stockholm is proposing to raise the current congestion charge and also introduce a congestion charge for traffic on Essingeleden from 1 January 2016. The increased annual tax income of €56.81 million (SEK500 million) will be invested in the extension of the metro system. Ulla Hamilton, vice mayor of traffic, said that the increased population growth in Stockholm has prompted her Moderate Party to promote added congestion charges.
  • The drive for US road funding: will corporate America get a seat?
    September 13, 2017
    Trumponomics aims to use public money for pump-priming an even greater amount of cash from the private sector to improve America’s crumbling roads. But is political will matching corporate America’s enthusiasm for more private investment, asks David Arminas If there were ever a test case for comparing public-private partnerships and design-build contracts, the recently completed Ohio River Bridges Project is it (see previous article).