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Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th 2014 Newcastle University James Laird, Greg Marsden, Jeremy Shires [email protected]

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Page 1: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Institute for Transport StudiesFACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT

Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption

UTSG January 6th-8th 2014

Newcastle University

James Laird, Greg Marsden, Jeremy Shires [email protected]

Page 2: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Flooding in York

Page 3: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Structure of presentation

• Research questions

• State of practice in CBA of disruptive events

• Case studies

– Snow and ice in the UK

– Flooding in York

• Problems with state of practice CBA and disruption

• Conclusions and further research

Page 4: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Research questions

• Are user costs/benefits truly representative of the socio-economic costs during periods of disruption?

• Are cost benefit analysis methods appropriate for assessing policies/interventions that ameliorate disruption?

Page 5: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Workington Northside Bridge Collapse 2009© Andy V Byers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Workington_floods

Page 6: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

State of practice in assessing socio-economic costs of disruption

• 1994 Northridge earthquake (Los Angeles)

– US$1.6million per day (Wesemann et al., 1996)

• 2007 Minneapolis I-35W bridge collapse

– US$71,000 to US$220,000 per day (Xie and Levinson, 2011)

• Road closures in Central North Island

– NZ$8,000 to NZ$23,000 per hour (Dalziell and Nicholson, 2001)

• Retrofitting freeway bridges for seismic resistance (Los Angeles)

– Traveller costs due to disruption necessary to justify investment (Shinozuka et al., 2008)

Page 7: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Economic theory

Transport costs (TC)

Traffic (volume)

ATC0

TC1

X1X0

Demand0,1

Supply1

Supply0

Network without disruption

Transport costs (TC)

Traffic (volume)

C

TC1-disrupt

TC0-disrupt

X0-disrupt X1-disrupt

Demand0,1

Supply0-disrupt

Supply1-disrupt

Network during disruption

TC0

TC1

X1X0

Use benefits = (1-p). Area A + p. Area CWhere p = probability(disruption)

Page 8: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Conditions for user benefits to reflect total economic impact

• Measuring user benefits

– Rule of half must hold

– The marginal costs of disruption are known

• Are user benefits all the benefits? Yes if:

– Benefits are certain (i.e. no uncertainty)

– Perfect competition holds everywhere

– Transport is the only ‘market’ affected

– Land uses are not affected

Page 9: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Snow at Heathrow © Caroline Cook. http://www.airportsinternational.com/2010/01/snow-patrol/snow-heathrow-2

Page 10: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Case study 1UK snow and ice - 2013

• 18th January 2013

• Disruption for several days

• School closures – more than 5,000 on 21st January

• Cancellation of public transport – including major airports

• Road closures

• Difficulty travelling on roads that were open.

• On-line panel

• N = 2418

• 6 worst affected regions

Page 11: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Case Study 2 – York Floods

Page 12: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Snow in Kent in 2009: http://www.wilmingtonpc.kentparishes.gov.uk/default.cfm?pid=3873

Page 13: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Marginal costs of disruption

• Can standard values of time be used?

• Activity schedules

– Time constraint bites harder as delays build up (Jenelius et al., 2011)

– Evidence from case studies:

• Short term cancellation/postponment possible, but cannot delay indefinitely going to work, etc.

• Tremendous heterogeneity in resilience and impact of disruption (e.g. childcare: stay at home mum vs single working mother vs dual income households)

– Longer term expect activity schedules to adapt (for e.g. longer lasting disruption e.g. bridge collapse)

Page 14: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Breakdown in rule of half

• Large cost changes

– UK Snow and ice: 41% of commute and business trips cancelled or postponed (indirect evidence of cost change)

– York flooding: reported journey time increases of 1 hour on a ‘normal’ 15min to 20min journeys

– Nellthorp and Hyman (2001) RoH error of >10%, de Jong et al (2007) error up to 32%

• Loss of mode

– York flooding: bus service was cancelled

– RoH cannot be used

• Analytical solution:

– Numeric integration (Nellthorp and Hyman, 2001) or direct integration of demand curve (de Jong et al., 2007)

Page 15: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Treatment of uncertainty

• In the presence of uncertainty

(i) Expected use benefits are probabilistic (Captured in standard approach)

(ii) There exists a risk premium/option value (not captured)

– Expect households and businesses to adapt behaviour to changes in uncertainty.

• Case study evidence:

– Stress and difficulty of dealing with uncertainty

– Loss of bus service and difficulties that caused

– Benefit of stay-at-home mum is increased resilience (cost is income foregone).

– Households with experience of flooding hold higher stocks

• Analytical solution

– Option values can impact on appraisal (Laird et al., 2009, 2013). Expect option values of increased winter gritting capacity, flood defences, etc.

– Need to model long run shift in supply curve (i.e. supply chain modelling/stock monitoring

Page 16: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Impacts across markets

• Some disruptive events confined to transport network only BUT:

• Case study evidence:

– Snow and ice: 5,000 schools closed (impacts on education and employment). Premier league etc. football matches postponed.

– Flooding: significant damage at 30 homes and businesses. York dungeon, Grand Opera House, Comedy Club, Badminton Horse Trials and Great Yorkshire Show all cancelled due to flooding.

• Transport market analysis will not pick up all benefits.

– Need a multi-market analysis

Page 17: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Policies that promote resilience to disruption

• Resilience policies

– New infrastructure (transport and non-transport)

– Softer measures:

• Flexible working/tele-working

• Land use intensification (walking trips least affected)

• Appraisal issues for ‘non-transport’ projects

– Flexible working etc.

• Is ‘non-transport’ & needs to be assessed in a labour market paradigm

– Land use intensification cannot be assessed using rule of half, as attractiveness of land alters through land use policy

Page 18: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Conclusions and further research

A890 land slide at Loch Carron © Ross-shire Journal http://www.ross-shirejournal.co.uk/News/Strome-ferry-timetable-unveiled-13012012.htm

Page 19: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Conclusions and further research

• Are user costs/benefits truly representative of the socio-economic costs during periods of disruption?

– No

– Option values/risk premia, multiple market impacts, ‘non-transport’ interventions are missing from that paradigm

• Are cost benefit analysis methods appropriate for assessing policies/interventions that ameliorate disruption?

– Yes

– But measurement challenges exist.

– Further research: marginal costs of disruption, risk premia of resilient infrastructure, multiple market modelling

Page 20: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Evaluating transport and land use interventions in the face of disruption UTSG January 6 th -8 th

Thank you for your attention