Skip to main content

UK should consider road miles pricing system

President of the Automobile Association urges “more radical thinking” after lockdown.
By David Arminas June 9, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Will there be road miles pricing after the dark days of COVID? (photo © Jevanto/Dreamstime)

The head of one of the largest UK motoring organisations is backing a “road miles” pricing system for drivers, according to media reports.

Edmund King, president of the Automobile Association, said “more radical thinking” from metropolitan and city leaders is needed as the country emerges from the COVID crisis.

King said people’s experience of cleaner air, quieter roads and home-working means an opportunity for positive change exists. “I am optimistic that this lockdown is beginning to change the attitudes of drivers … If local authorities can put in well planned infrastructure to walk and to cycle – and public transport when that returns – I do feel that can have a credible difference,” he said.

King was speaking at a virtual conference organised by the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit, a non-profit organisation that supports debate on energy and climate change issues in the UK.

The Guardian newspaper noted that King said a car miles – or road miles – system could allow urban drivers to have the first 3,000 miles (4,830km) free and rural drivers would get an extra 1,000 miles (1,610km) free. After these miles, they would have to pay per journey.

King said the AA’s own research that showed its members were ready to change their behaviour after lockdown ends. “Transport patterns won’t be the same in life after lockdown, according to drivers,” he said. “Half say they will walk more; four in 10 vow to drive less; a quarter will work from home more and one fifth will cycle more.”

The Guardian newspaper also noted that a per-mile charging scheme based on the environmental impact of vehicle journeys has become more popular in recent years. London mayor Sadiq Khan reportedly has considered a per-mile charging scheme in the capital city. According to the Centre for London, a think-tank backed by some politicians and business groups, has said such an urban charge would be a more sophisticated approach to road charging and be an improvement on London’s current ultra-low emissions zone.

Related Content

  • Angry wife tells husband it’s over with a message on a freeway billboard
    October 9, 2015
    Billboards are used to advertise everything, from toothpaste to airplanes and also to get a message across, such as don’t litter the highway. But one wife in Sheffield, United Kingdom, decided to make it personal, and tell her cheating husband that it was all over.
  • Make the case for electronic tolling, ASECAP conference delegates heard
    September 14, 2015
    Mobility pricing and electronic tolling is the future, delegates to a recent ASECAP Study Days conference, reports Geoff Hadwick at the Lisbon event. The international road tolling industry is failing to make its case and the sector is losing out to other social and political lobby groups. As a result, “tolling is still on the sidelines”, according to the head of the Washington-based International Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association. IBTTA chief executive Pat Jones issued his stark warning at the
  • UK’s M6 tolled motorway for sale
    June 21, 2016
    For sale: one UK toll motorway along with operating business. Well maintained. Price negotiable. David Arminas looks at what is on offer As if right on cue, a French articulated truck starts to back up along the hard shoulder at an exit area of M6toll. The manoeuvring is watched from an office inside the nearby M6toll headquarters. Inside, Andy Pearson, chief executive of M6toll, glances over his shoulder and interrupts his presentation to World Highways. “He’s probably missed the dedicated wide-load
  • London plans major new road tunnels to give its residents a better quality of life
    September 24, 2014
    London’s transport authority, Transport for London (TfL) is considering orbital and cross-city road tunnels to help reduce pollution in the capital and create more pleasant environments for the residents of its various districts. “We believe we need to think more ambitiously,” TfL’s Michael Colella, currently lead sponsor for HS2, told the British Tunnelling Society conference in London on Wednesday. “We are looking at taking a significant part of our road traffic and in essence burying it and reusing the