Urban network tolls
Road-user charging in urban and rural settings throws up more challenges: networks are complex, traffic patterns are different and tall buildings affect the satellite signal. Even so, Singapore is moving from a gantry-based system to satellite-based tolling, and cities such as Melbourne, Brussels, Vancouver and Jakarta are also considering it.
Typically, existing city tolling charging regimes, such as those operating in London, Birmingham, Bristol and Stockholm, are focused on air quality and modal shift, and charge vehicles a daily fee based on their type and emissions. Their operating costs tend to be far higher than strategic network systems.
Currently, revenue from these schemes tends to be recycled into local initiatives or hypothecated into transport investment. In the UK, though, zone-based urban network charging could form part of an overall replacement road-user taxation policy, alongside a distance-based solution for strategic roads. Much of the infrastructure is already in place in some cities, in the form of air quality zones. Central government could facilitate the introduction and set overall integration standards, while toll charges and coverages to fit local conditions.