VietNamNet Bridge – In an effort to reduce traffic congestion, the People’s Committee of HCM City has approved a plan to collect road tolls on cars entering downtown areas.


{keywords}

Traffic congestion on the Binh Trieu Bridge section of National Route No 13 in HCM City. — Photo: VNA/VNS 


The city’s Department of Transport is working with Innovative Technology Development Corporation (ITD) to finalise procedures to begin the project in three months.

The project will be executed under a PPP (public-private partnership) contract.

Lam Thieu Quan, president and CEO of ITD, said that several contract clauses submitted by ITD to HCM City authorities in 2011 had become outdated.

He said additional clauses about the scheme must include studies of the city’s public transport system, including buses, taxis and the future metro system.

Investments, toll and fine levels should also be re-considered.

Tolls would not be collected everywhere, but only on roads now facing traffic jams.

“Motorbikes are the major means of transport of most residents, so efforts to collect road tolls and reduce use of motorbikes don’t seem feasible,” said Quan.

Since "the State budget for maintenance of road networks remains limited, toll collections imposed on cars entering traffic-clogged inner districts are appropriate," he added.

Ngo Hai Duong, head of the city’s Transport Department’s Road Infrastructure Management and Exploitation Division, said that certain aspects of the plan were under consideration, including the parameters of the downtown area, the toll amounts during specific hours, and capital investment needed, among others.

Prior to implementation, authorities would collect feedback from local residents and experts, Duong said.

Since the primary purpose was to reduce traffic congestion in the city’s centre, tolls would only be applied at rush hour, he added.

The charges would be between VND40,000 (US$1.76) and VND60,000 ($2.64), depending on the type of vehicle, a representative of ITD said.

Tolls would not be applied to buses and public service vehicles, while drivers would be required to pay fees only when entering the downtown area, he said.

ITD’s 2011 project

In an interview with Viet Nam News, Lam said that tolls would be collected at 35 automatic tollgates on streets leading to the city centre from a ring road from Hoang Sa Street along the Nhieu Loc-Thi Nghe Canal through Nguyen Phuc Nguyen, February 2nd, Le Hong Phong, Ly Thai To, Nguyen Van Cu, Vo Van Kiet, and Ton Duc Thang streets.

The tollgates would automatically collect fees from OBUs (On Board Units) equipment installed in cars. Car owners can buy an OBU for VND800,000 (US$38) or hire one.

Initially the fee would be VND30,000 for each entry by car with fewer than seven seats and VND50,000 for larger vehicles, but would later increase to VND40,000 and VND70,000, respectively, during peak hours.

Fees will be collected between 6am and 8pm every day.

According to ITD’s study of streets running to the city centre, 110,000 to 150,000 vehicles enter downtown HCM City every day.

The tolls could help lower demand for car travel to the city centre by 30 to 40 per cent and reduce traffic jams in the downtown area.

ITD’s project also aims to prevent taxi drivers from driving into inner districts without passengers.

People who want to enter the city centre in their own cars or by taxi must pay the toll. Otherwise, they can travel to downtown areas on motorbikes or by bus, both of which have a smaller contact surface on streets.

In HCM City, cars meet only 10 per cent of residents’ demand for transport, but occupy 50 per cent of the street contact surface.

In addition to curbing traffic congestion, toll collection is expected to encourage residents to shift from individual vehicles to public transport.

“However, fee collection alone cannot curb traffic jams. It must be combined with other measures such as urban and infrastructure planning, and development of mass transport like the metro and monorail,” said Lam.

“The project is just one of the important measures to combat traffic congestion. But other districts like Tan Binh, Tan Phu, and Binh Thanh also face traffic jams,” he added. 

VNS

related news