mobility and transport in new zealand - leading to the future
DESCRIPTION
Jean-Paul Thull's presentation from the NERI Winter Lights Thought Leadership Forum held on 16th June 2011 in Dunedin, New Zealand.TRANSCRIPT
Jean-Paul H M ThullTransport & Energy Management
Department of Environmental Management Faculty of Environment, Society & Design
Lincoln University - Christchurch
MOBILITY AND TRANSPORT IN NEW ZEALANDLeading to the Future
Winter Lights 2011 - A NERI Thought Leadership ForumDunedin 16 June 2011
Overview
• Situation in New Zealand: facts, culture,
• Principles to reflect on across all modes
• Strategies
• sustainability, social responsibility & resilience
New Zealand Facts
• Small population 4.3 million• > 85% living in main centres• NZ geography (bridges, hills, tunnels)• Transport barriers (geography, road-
rail networks, ports)• Imports by ships – NZ is at mercy of
overseas decision-makers• +10,000km sealed state highway
network maintained to high standards• Freight transport by road increased
over the years, whereas rail & coastal shipping stagnated
Passenger vehicles in NZ
• Introduction of cheap Japanese vehicle Imports• Large NZ vehicle fleet of average age over 10
years– Pros: long life-cycle, employment– Cons: fuel consumption +30% compared to EC
• Population is used to access driving from +15yrs - no culture of commuter cycling, walking & use of PT
• Cheap fuel up to 2008• Perception of wealth (housing market) around 2005
encouraged to purchased high powered vehicles• Vehicles purchased to suit hobby• Extra vehicles purchased for extended family• NZ families have more kids than average EC
countries, hence larger cars required• NZ third country ranked in world for obesity –
restricted use of small mart cars
Sustainability & New Zealand
• 73% of freight transported within regions (Paling study) > more roads to be built• Short-haul rail has so far only be pushed by externalities (e.g. congestion or
regulations -see POAL)
• NZ has no culture for walking & cycling – centres have never been developed to encourage soft modes for everyone– commuter cycling is perceived as a gym exercise causing accidents due to
inappropriate speed– Walking-running across mountains – backpacks used for tramping –hardly for
grocery shopping– access to private motor vehicles is too easy and cheap compared to other
OECD countries• WHY BOTHER? No political drive – hardly air pollution concerns - no energy supply
issues
• UNLESS Energy Supply or Costs become an issue!!!! • Or Having to be serious about planning for resilience
22 February Earthquake in Christchurch
• Half of Christchurch's 2000-kilometre road network needing repairs
• About 38,000 cracks, slumps and lumps in roads
Photographs by A. Hansbury
Infrastructure seriously munted in eastern Christchurch suburbs
Priority to re-establish infrastructure
Christchurch post 22 Feb 2011
Main areas of post-earthquake office & business relocations result into major transport challenges
Source: NZTA March 2011business relocation survey Photographs by A. Hansbury
Existing Public Transport System
What are the implications of the earthquake on the Christchurch public transport system?
The routes will need to be reassessed
Source: http://metroinfo.co.nz/eqmap/
REALITY CHECK
Orbital movements replace the radial pattern
Travel dominated by private and company cars
Roads not designed for increased activity
Severe congestion and delays
Longer distances travelled
Extended travel times
Bus services disjointed or cut
Increased petrol consumption, costs and pollution
Emerging travel patterns in CHC post earthquake
Photo: NZ in Tranzit
Cycling as one resilient option
Planning for carbon-constrained future
(MED, 2010)
Expectation of fuel demand to drop while gas (LNG may go up) for transport
Source: Managermagazin.de (5-4-2011)
Planning for automobilityPlanning for automobility
• Do congestion and/or high fuel price affect our life?– People expect government
intervention– Retail is suffering– Increase of freight costs are directly
coupled to retail prices – Decrease of quality of life
Reality Check - Behaviour
• Transportation behaviour and physical activity levels are likely to partially reflect attitudes and preferences.
– People who prefer not to drive are more likely to live in walkable environments
– People who enjoy driving or do not mind extra driving for a cheaper house, rural property, seaside property, better schools tend to choose more automobile-oriented locations.
– As a result, some differences in travel behaviour between walkable and automobile-oriented locations may reflect self-gratification rather than the pure effects of land use
Planning for people not cars
• Large intersections making pedestrian crossing difficult + dangerous• Large streets with no life (taken Saturday)• Garaging takes a major criteria for residential housing• Increasing residential density through design or just through high
housing costs will create a high demand for car parking on the street
Planning for an energy responsive demandPlanning for an energy responsive demand
Freight transport by road
• Road transport is easy to organise & increasing fuel costs are just added to the whole supply chain paid by the customer– There is a lack of transparency to the customer to identify whether
the carbon footprint of freight is high or not
Road Freight Transport• Crucial to keep urgent freight distributed• Crucial in parts of NZ that have not access to rail or shipping• Crucial in greater urban areas for distribution• Sustainability can be increased through
– more modern vehicles – reducing fuel consumption - may be electric– vehicle management information should reflect on driver’s salary bonus –
low fuel consumption, no speeding should be honoured!– Ensuring payload is maximised– Increased ease towards short-haul multi-modal loads (road-rail-coastal)– More co-operation between modes to minimise mode transfer times +
encourage other modes
Technical solutions? Technical solutions?
Modal change?Modal change?None of those below is fuel efficient- no incentive for
modern vehicles (eg. tax on emissions)
Railfreight
• Best for bulk freight – can compete with the other modes• Would do better still if tracks, bridges, tunnels, gradients,
radius of curves and fail-save signalling systems allowed modern rail systems to be implemented
• Different energy systems (AC/DC-Diesel) on parts of the main WLG-AKL trunk line
• Missing network gaps (e.g. Northland Port connection, Picton-Nelson-Inangahua Junction)
Rail Passenger• Long-haul
– Too expensive – Too slow– Too uncomfortable
• Urban commuting– Missing links and poor CBD connections– Lack of airport connections (relevant to reliability)– Not sympathetic to multi-modal integration (limitation
of 3 bikes per train/carriage in Wellington)– Keeping to time schedules highly problematic due to
old gear & track work– No tram-trains
Aviation
• Developed between WW I –II– Cook Strait – first commercial flights
• Connectivity relevance
• Grab-a-seat may trigger additional passenger demand
• Aviation fuel supply can be at risk in disaster situation
Shipping• International Shipping• Domestic Coastal Shipping (incl. Cook Strait)
– Sustainability: shipping is most efficient & resilient means for freight– Sustainability needs encouragement by government similar support to
other modes by looking e.g. at rail and its indirect subsidies of companies using rail (e.g. efficient & effective land access to Ports)
– Government support to encourage more modern vessels for coastal shipping in terms of fuel efficiency
Response to 22 Feb 2011 (source Steve Chapman)
• Pacifica Shipping was first container ship on 26 Feb (Spirit of Endurance) and 27 Feb (Spirit of Resolution) both came from Auckland, bringing Freshwater BOC gas for hospital
Shipping- Ports
• Planning infrastructure simply for maximising efficiency & profits without factoring in protection from natural disasters in NZ is irresponsible
– NZ needs a minimum of 2 Superports : Nth. Is. Auckland or Tauranga (population factor) – 1 in Sth. Is. that keep abreast of technical developments including increased size of vessels (e.g. 7000TEU)
– Crucial for NZ to have responsive coastal shipping operating to offset potential natural disasters
Strait Shipping
Strait Shipping
Kiwi Rail Cook Strait Ferries
Kiwi Rail contribution to sustainability:
•Speed reduction whenever possible, leaving 20 minutes ahead of scheduled time – 25% bunker reduction
Pacifica Shipping
full cargo vessel
contribution to sustainability: cleaning
the outside under water surfaces saves 5-10%
bunker
Should cruise ships be banned? Should cruise ships be banned?
Are these policies really going to make a change? Measurable targets? Statutory targets?
New Zealand Transport Strategy, 2008
National target – increase PT modal share to 7% by 2040many good intentions....
National Land Transport Programme (NLTP) 2009-2012
- Primary focus is on roads- 21% fund increase for public transport
•Photo: www.turbophoto.com
What do the strategies say?
Metropolitan Christchurch Transport Statement (MCTS)substantial funding to public transport (other than roads) including bus priority lanes, faster ticketing, park and ride facilities, dynamic information systems, interchanges, high quality buses
What about quality of bus drivers?
Canterbury Regional Land Transport Strategy (RLTS) Canterbury Regional Passenger Transport Plan (RPTP)
- Primary focus is on strategic roads- 21% fund increase for public transport- For Christchurch – new Bus Exchange identified for funding
What do the strategies say??
Source: www.metroinfo.co.nz
Road• Widen major corridors NOW –if required- to enable multi modal capability• Toll Lane on new southern Motorway in peak times – legislation to be changed• Build off road 3m cycle-way to link suburbs, along railway line and within city
centre
Bus• Revised network for emerging post-quake land use patterns• More orbital routes (eg. around 4 avenues)• Rethink bus exchange • Multi-modal interchanges (eg. Park and ride facilities)• CONTINOUS priority bus lanes that may adapted to BRT or LRT later• BUS PRIORITY AT ALL INTERSECTIONS (Swiss Model)
LRT• Get LRT underway more sexy than BRT
Opportunities created by the earthquakes
Alcatel-Lucent advertisement
• “How Fast Will Trains Run In The Future? – In Gibabits/s Please
Environmental challenges in transport sector(high on the agenda)
Differentiation by urban forms
• High density urban environments (e.g. Europe, Japan)– Congestion
• noise pollution• air pollution – PM10, NOX, CO• Population health issues (pollution exposure, community cohesion,
physical fitness)• traffic safety impacts
– Carbon footprint awareness• Topic raised by media• Political environment – strong green political parties
Mitigation strategies
• High density urban environment– Congestion (noise & air pollution)
• Noise mitigation walls along highway and railway corridors• Air pollution mitigation
– Catalytic converters from 1980s onward (California, Japan, followed by EC)
– EUR 1 to EUR 5 heading to EUR 6 to minimise PM10 & NOX)– Banning of polluting vehicles in some German cities (min EUR3)
– Land-use planning - congestion tolls – lane tolling, toll roads e.g. Singapore, China, Australia (Sydney), Japan…..
Environmental challenges in transport sector
• Low density environment (e.g. New Zealand)– Run-off roads into waterways (e.g. effluent, tyres)– Ballast water from vessels (especially after Japan nuclear disaster)
– Prevention of oil spills in waterways– Building roads through national parks– Distribution of plants & organims by transport (Didymo)
– ………???
– Congestion in Auckland (not perceived as environmental issue, more of a commercial impact)
– Energy supply is not seen as an environmental challenge
• All successful places adopted this why not New Zealand?– Let’s first develop land
along PT corridors– Stop ‘Pegasus’ type
developments in the future unless they pay for regular PT services
• It is all about ZONING
Greater Christchurch Urban Development Strategy (UDS)Greater Christchurch Urban Development Strategy (UDS)
How does Transit Orientated Planning fits with UDS?
Photo: www.ccc.govt.nz
What about LRT ? Some Facts (info S. Ginn, CCC)
Journeys System Length Journeys perper day km day per km
82,000 Croydon 27 3,050248,000 Calgary 45 5,520 230,000 Grenoble 34 6,760 288,000 Rouen 43 6,650 62,700 Denver 56 1,113 41,300 Salt Lake 30 1,355 42,000 Edmonton 13 3,415 107,600 Portland 71 1,515
COMPARISON OF LIGHT RAIL BUILDING COSTS(Info S. Ginn, CCC)
Line Cost Cost in millions per Km NZ
Phoenix US $1.4 billion $62Salt Lake City US $1.1 billion $52Denver US $880 million $41Portland US $3.0 billion $33Edmonton CAN $344 million $32Croydon GP 230 million $20Calgary CAN $548 million $14
Parameters to consider• Population: min 200,000
• Density is crucial: In Grenoble, (400,000), 20% of city’s population and 27% of its workers live within 400 metres walking distance of LRT stations
• Resilience: – increased distances for commuter travel– high fuel prices or/and– Fuel supply difficulties (plan for 20-30% less fuel demand!)– LRT is less resilient than BRT but only due to flexible routes– Should PT switch to electricity in NZ?
REDUCING LRT INITIAL SET-UP COSTS
• Using existing heavy rail tracks with only partial street running.
• Consider using diesel LRT vehicles that do not require over head power, sub stations, etc.
• The cost of LRT vehicle provision can be reduced if second hand rolling stock is used to start the network – though not ideal.
Cargo Tram in Dresden
• Integrate ability of freight movement by LRT/heavy rail for each new commercial facility
To make LRT work in Christchurch: Zoning, Corridor planning & Accessibility (short-cuts within mesh blocks are crucial), high tax on company cars for private use, give incentives to workers to use PT, PT pass compulsory as part of student fees + employees salary package
The Future - People Mobility
• What is the impact of sustainable transport & land-use planning in a wider sense?
– Modal choices (individual – public)– Accessibility – Equity in terms of access to mobility– Human health (air & noise pollution), fitness, mental health
Planning for individual motorised mobility• Encouragement for small cc rating if buying a vehicle
– No attraction to most people as usually boring except for VW– Usually only new vehicle (VW Polo TDI1.4) > expensive– Importing small cars have no margin for second hand car dealers– Small CC ratings are likely to be purchased by retired folks (low
maintenance, low costs, high safety)– Small CC usually related to small vehicle not allowing transport of
sports equipment, pets, 2-3 kids and groceries• Should be seen as city vehicle –
– Ideally electric plug-ins
– Hybrids not relevant as not using less fuel than small CC ratings
Planning for individual motorised mobility• Electric vehicle may still be far away
– Testing going on (Sixt, car2go...)– Nobody is prepared to pay for infrastructure
• ppp’s seem difficult to get underway unless government pays for risk + subsidises the $10k-$20k additional costs
• NZ: 2020 may be .5% (1000 vehicles)• NZ: 2030 difficult to predict
• LNG driven vehicles
• Car sharing an option but difficult in relation with existing suburban density
– Pool car could work if we had bottom-up approach residential development, having same mind-set of people living in such an area (more left wing intellectuals)
– Difficulty is that usually people desire vehicle at similar times with short-term bookings which is difficult
Changing decision-making system for mobility
• A shift in cultural thinking is required associated with incentives or costs– long-term cars should be seen as a liability and not an asset
– New residential areas should have a common covered car parking area away from the house to make people think that there are other modes with having a wooden shed at the entrance for rubbish bins and bikes
• High quality PT is expensive to install but it is a long-term investment that will keep population mobile if fuel supply was interrupted – there is no escape for government to get out of it – it will need to be associated with corridor planning
Urban & Transport Planning Future of Christchurch residential relocations
No need to mention the challenge……in regard to energy demand
• Energy demand for commuting may rise up to 200-300% depending on the relocation area – will technology solve the energy demand problem?
• Opportunity to integrate Light Rail as part of the package and create walkable new residential areas 500m on each side of Light rail system
• Satellite towns should not be increased unless a LR is constructed
Fun & Mobility in NZ
• Changing that existing culture is not easy and requires offering a new environment to encourage soft modes (e.g. Harbour Bridge crossing for bikes & pedestrians is one example!
• Increasing urban recreation Example right may not apply for S.I.
Living Streets
Madras Street (Marianne Dahl, Lincoln University, 2011)
Madras Street (Marianne Dahl, Lincoln University, 2011)
Durlacher Allee, KarlsruheOrangerie, Strasbourg
Subiaco, PerthLuxembourg
Shared Space
Outlook• Planning for reduced energy demand• Encouragement of reducing VKT• Corridor planning associated with zoning • Keeping options open in terms of PT modes• PT needs to be attractive (WIFI, workspace)with appropriate
staff• Funding of PT should be sourced from everyone in education
& workplaces• Rates should reflect connectivity demand (high density
residential paying less)• Vehicle registration should be associated to CO2 emissions• ACC levy in vehicle registration should reflect number of
times vehicles caught in traffic fines + every traffic fine should be doubled to go towards ACC
VW Caddy 1200cc
Dr-Ing Jean-Paul Thull (MCILT, NZIA)Senior lecturer in transport, logistics, urban planning, energy and waste managementDepartment of Environmental ManagementFaculty of Environment, Society & DesignLincoln University
Ph: 03-3253838 ext 8779Email: [email protected]