Skip to main content

Could the US Interstates be reconstructed using with toll finance?

The US Interstate network needs serious investment, and tolling could provide the answer - *Bob Poole writes Could the ageing US Interstate highway system be rebuilt and modernised using toll finance? What kind of toll rates would this require? How feasible would doing this be? In September the Reason Foundation released a study on this issue. The study showed that it may be feasible to finance the reconstruction and selective widening of nearly the entire Interstate system using moderate toll rates collect
November 13, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
US highway maintenance and development could be funded by further tolling
The US Interstate network needs serious investment, and tolling could provide the answer - *Bob Poole writes

Could the ageing US Interstate highway system be rebuilt and modernised using toll finance? What kind of toll rates would this require? How feasible would doing this be? In September the Reason Foundation released a study on this issue. The study showed that it may be feasible to finance the reconstruction and selective widening of nearly the entire Interstate system using moderate toll rates collected via all-electronic tolling (AET). Nationwide, the net present value (NPV) of toll revenue equalled 99% of the NPV of the US$1 trillion cost.

 More interesting is the state-by-state assessment. Separate analysis was done for each state, with all the data on route-miles, lane-miles, and unit costs provided by the 2410 Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). To estimate traffic and revenue, the study relied on estimates of annual vehicle miles of travel (VMT) growth rates derived from recent modeling at US DOT’s Volpe Center, with separate growth rates for light vehicles and heavy vehicles for each state. For the basic tolling model, the study used 3.5¢/mile for cars and 14¢/mile for trucks, adjusted annually by an assumed CPI increase of 2.5%.

In the state-by-state toll-feasibility analysis, 30 of the 50 states had NPV of revenues greater than NPV of costs using the baseline toll rates. Of those 30, nine (mostly southern and western states) could use the tolling model with somewhat lower rates than the baseline. Another nine had ratios of 80-90%, suggesting they would need slightly higher toll rates than the baseline rates. Five heavily urbanised states with high construction costs would need significantly higher toll rates, but not out of line with those now charged on new urban toll roads. There left just six problem states, where toll-financed Interstate
modernisation would be a stretch, mostly mountainous states (high costs) with low traffic. In five of these car tolls of 6-10¢/mile would likely be needed and truck tolls of 25-40¢/mile. These high charges may not be deemed acceptable in those states. Only Alaska, with an NPV ratio showing baseline toll revenues covering only 24% of the cost, appears clearly not toll-feasible.

The study assumed the use of value-added tolling. That means tolling would be applied only when an Interstate corridor has been reconstructed (and widened, if necessary). In addition, assuming fuel taxes are still in existence at the time tolling begins, it might be reasonable that those paying the tolls on the modernised Interstate be given rebates for the fuel taxes they pay for driving those specific miles (easy to do with an AET system).

The study makes only one major policy recommendation: that US Congress allow tolling of Interstates for the specific purpose of reconstruction and widening, with the toll revenues used only for those purposes (Plus operating and maintenance costs). This would essentially constitute mainstreaming of the existing three-state pilot programme for Interstate reconstruction using toll finance, broadening it (1) to all states and DC, and (2) to apply to all the Interstates in a state, not just a single project in each.
(%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal http://reason.org/studies/show/modernizing-the-interstate-highway modernizing the interstate-highway false http://reason.org/studies/show/modernizing-the-interstate-highway false false%>)

Looking further afield, the problems the US Interstate system is having at present with regard to providing sufficient funding can be seen in many other developed nations. Tolling could become a much bigger part of the transportation funding for the future in the developed west. It is worth noting too how many of the developing nations, such as Brazil and Russia, are using the tolling model for their new highway developments.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New road funding plans face uncertain future
    September 29, 2014
    Worldwide the issue of road investment is facing close scrutiny. Developing nations are concentrating on developing road networks, benefiting from foreign loans or investments. Meanwhile in developed nations, the focus is more on road network repair rather than expansion.
  • Wildlife risk to drivers survey being conducted
    June 29, 2016
    A researcher based in Canada is carrying out a research project in the form of a survey assessing the safety risk posed by wildlife to drivers. The risk posed by wildlife to those travelling in vehicles can be severe in some areas and evaluating data can be important for assessing risk levels and awareness of risk levels amongst road users. There is the potential for serious injury or even death in the event of crashes with large animals or at high speeds. Meanwhile a driver avoiding an animal in the roadwa
  • Canadian PM Trudeau warned of costs rises for Gordie Howe Bridge
    January 11, 2016
    A devaluing Canadian dollar has pushed up the cost for building a signature Windsor-Detroit bridge by around US$2.5 billion, according to Canadian media reports. The increase more than doubles what was believed needed by the Canadian government to construct the Gordie Howe Bridge, named after a Canadian ice hockey player who played most of his career for the Detroit Red Wings. The toll bridge, to be built under a public private partnership, will link the US city of Detroit, in the state of Michigan, w
  • Future funding crisis looms?
    August 13, 2012
    From the UK’s Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) comes data revealing a future funding crisis many governments will face. The IFS study, commissioned by the RAC Foundation, shows that income from motoring taxation will fall as traffic volumes increase. The problem is that increasing fuel efficiency of new generation vehicles, plus the introduction of electric cars, will deliver smaller and smaller returns on fuel taxation. Although fuel is taxed heavily in the UK, and right across Europe, projections show t