1 / 22

Travel Time and Sustainable Travel Behaviour

Travel Time and Sustainable Travel Behaviour. David Metz Centre for Transport Studies University College London. National Travel Survey. 7-day travel diaries recording personal travel Annual sample of 20,000 Since 1972 Longest time series; high quality Excludes international air travel

gallegosj
Download Presentation

Travel Time and Sustainable Travel Behaviour

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Travel Time and Sustainable Travel Behaviour David Metz Centre for Transport Studies University College London

  2. National Travel Survey • 7-day travel diaries recording personal travel • Annual sample of 20,000 • Since 1972 • Longest time series; high quality • Excludes international air travel • Measures ‘daily travel’

  3. Travel time, hours per person per year

  4. Distance & journeys per person per year

  5. Trips by age

  6. Trips (pppy) according to car ownership

  7. Trips (pppy) according to income

  8. Main journey purpose, trips pppy

  9. Travel spend (% of household spend)

  10. Travel time: an hour a day Journeys: 1000 a year Journey purposes: unchanged Spend: 16% of household spend Incomes: double over 30 years Technology: incremental improvement + decarbonisation Car ownership increase? Distance travelled? Business-as-usual scenario

  11. Personal mobility: miles pppy

  12. Delays for slowest 10% of journeys on Strategic Road Network

  13. Hypothesis: daily travel demand has saturated • Access and choice increase with square of speed • Value of additional choice characterised by diminishing marginal utility • Prediction: sufficient choice experienced through mobility

  14. FIGURE 3.9Proportion of the UK urban population with a choice of one, two, three or fourgrocery stores each with a different fascia and larger than 1,400 sq metres Source: CACI Limited analysis of parties’ data submissions – from Competition Commission: The supply of groceries in the UK market investigation report, May 2008.

  15. Choice of schools and hospitals • Over 80% of pupils have at least 3 secondary schools within 5km of home • Secondary schools have 6 others within 10min drive time • 40% of population have up to 2 hospitals within 15min drive time; 90% within 60min

  16. Business-as-usual scenario (2) • Stable behaviour in aggregate: • 7100 miles • 1000 trips • 380 hours a year on average • But road traffic continues to grow….

  17. Growth 1996-2006 • Distance pppy (NTS) 0.2% pa • Vehicle km 1.3% • Cars 2.6% • Population 0.4% • Traffic growth due mainly to increase in car ownership • Distance per incremental car = ½ average

  18. Sustainable travel • Stable personal travel – travel demand saturated. • Some car ownership increase by ‘late adopters’, as car use approaches saturation. Some mode switch to cars. • Decarbonise transport system. • Manage congestion.

  19. Transport policy and operations • Interventions which have the effect of increasing speed lead to increased access • Interventions which have the effect of reducing speed tend to reduce access and choice • ‘Smart choices’ tend to involve speed reduction • Decarbonisation will need to rely mainly on technology

  20. Managing congestion • Can’t build our way out of congestion • Road pricing redistributes road space in favour of those who can afford to pay • Improved access for payers (induced traffic) • Reduced access and choice for non-payers • Likely to be unpopular • Main problem is journey time uncertainty

  21. Conventional transport economics • Main benefit is ‘travel time saving’ • Underestimates ‘induced traffic’…. • ….and carbon, accidents and other detriments • Travel a ‘derived demand’ • Agglomeration benefits • Modelling assumes minimisation of ‘generalised costs’ • Neglects behavioural economics

  22. References • The Myth of Travel Time Saving, Transport Reviews 28(3),321-336, 2008 • Responses to ‘Myth’ in November issue • The Limits to Travel, Earthscan, 2008 • www.limitstotravel.org.uk • National road pricing: a critique and an alternative, Proc Inst Civil Eng: Transport 161(TR3), 167-174, 2008 • Sustainable Travel Behaviour, UTSG January 2009 • Papers from david.metz@transport.ucl.ac.uk

More Related