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Space on the highway will be at
a premium. Managing
demand and the allocation of road space
will be essential
for efficient and reliable operation of
the network.
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Space on the highway will be at a premium.
Managing demand will be essential for efficient
and reliable operation of the network.
Strenuous efforts will be needed to promote
travel substitution and other options to
reduce the demand for transportation through
telecommuting, electronic communications,
and alternative work schedules.
Propganda to suppress travel may be inevitable.
("Is your journey really necessary?").
Rationing of mobility between people and
goods, and between competing calls for access
to the network will require instruments
to achieve mobility changes without social
exclusion.
Introduction of slot allocation and journey
booking systems, extensive queue management
and rationing of roadspace through dynamic
use of priority lanes, as well as mode switching
and the use of road pricing (congetion charges)
will all be deployed to prevent widespread
gridlock.
Enforcement will be an essential tool of
network management. Methods of enforcement
will be effective, easy on the network operator,
respectful of human rights and perceived
as fair and reasonable. Privacy, fairness,
will be key issues.
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| Case for Network Operator
Action |
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- Pressure on road space will grow if economic
activity is sustained and large-scale road building
is ruled out. Without any action widespread
gridlock will occur.
- The Network Operator will need to find ways
of optimising the use of available road space
between competing uses and groups of users.
- Road space on highways in metropolitan areas
and between major centres of population and
economic activity will be at a premium. The
Network Operator will be under increasing pressure
to address such problems.
- The Network Operator will be expected to
mobilise effective methods in support of high
level operational targets. Travel substitution,
priority lanes, mode switching and demand management
can all make a contribution.
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- Travel demand varies dynamically, both
geographically and over time. Measures
will be needed to keep transport demand
and supply in balance, in response to
both temporary fluctuations or more permanent
shortfalls in road space.
- A culture of freedom for
drivers to travel when and where they
wish will lead to huge fluctuations in
demand. This is especially likely at holiday
times, for leisure purposes and when the
weather is good.
- Delays on the network severely affect
the transport of both people and goods
with knock-on effects for the national
and local economies, not necessarily where
the delays occur.
- Long distance trips currently comprise
around 35% of the total distance travelled
annually, with business trips (mainly
car and plane) accounting for 12% (around
15 billion passenger kilometres) of the
total distance travelled.
- Road user charging for travel in congested
areas, or at congested times, is gaining
public acceptance although other methods
(e.g. gating and dynamic rationing
of road space) are less familiar.
- More than 66% of European organisations
with over 500 employees already practice
tele-work in one form or another through
distance working, tele / video conferencing,
distance training, e-commerce, e-banking,
tele-banking, etc.
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- Operate the highway network to balance
transport supply with transport demand
whilst maintaining acceptable performance
standards.
- Develop network operating strategies
to effect a dynamic allocation of road
space serving optional and non-essential
movements, as well as high-value journeys
and priority movements of freight.
- Encourage travel substitution and modal
shift to Public Transport.
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- Develop methods of congestion charging
through trial schemes. Link these with
measures to divert peak travel, to off-peak,
travel substitution, and mode switching.
- Promote greater use of priority lanes
and the enforcement methods to go with
them.
- Develop the technology for selective
ramp metering, queue management and dynamic
allocation of road space.
- Work with DTLR to develop impact forecasting
and assessment methods for telecommuting
and other forms of travel substitution
(e.g. on work patterns, leisure patterns,
living and working communities - de-urbanisation,
changing goods / service needs, etc).
- Evaluate tele-working and eTransport
strategies for their ability to ease traffic
congestion, with fuel savings, improved
environmental impacts and peak spreading,
as people change their lifestyles and
working patterns / times.
- Encourage vehicle sharing and park
and ride schemes - meeting points at service
stations.
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