Road pricing and its individual responses within travel patterns - lessons from the AKTA study.

Author(s)
Schoenfelder, S. Axhausen, K. Rich, J.A. Nielsen, O.A. & Wuertz, C.
Year
Abstract

While congestion cost pricing is discussed as a suitable tool for solving urban traffic problems, its impact on the travel pattern of individuals is largely unexplored. Individual responses to congestion pricing emerge as a number of different changes in attitude. As an example, it involves the reduction in actual trip making, more effective route choice decisions, trip chaining, and change of destination choice. The analysis of reliable data seems necessary to gain a deeper insight into the personal motivations of behavioural adjustments to the new monetary constraints. The AKTA Copenhagen study - which is part of the EU funded project Pricing ROad use for Greater Responsibility, Efficiency and Sustainability in cities (PROGRESS) - is a real life experiment of road pricing in the greater Copenhagen region (Nielsen and Jovicic, 2003; Nielsen, forthcoming). During 2001 and 2002, about 400 cars were equipped with GPS data loggers over a period of up to 24 weeks. The onboard systems monitored vehicle movement data for each second and were parallely used to simulate road pricing by displaying cost information for every trip driven. The experiment showed significant elasticities with a decrease in daily kilometrage between 0 and 40 % depending on the location and the pricing scheme. One of the appealing features of AKTA is the possibility to examine the differentiated pricing system applied against its impact on personal mobility. The paper goes into the question of how road pricing impacts travel behaviour and in particular destination choice by deeply analysing the rich GPS trip data set. The panel structure with multiple observations for single cars/drivers allows to investigate the diversity of individual activity repertoires and related travel patterns in both, the control and the pricing periods. In particular, the analysis aims at describing how road pricing affects: the choice of destinations trip chaining the size and structure of activity spaces. In addition, we look into how the socio-economic profile of drivers affects the sensitivity to road pricing. For the covering abstract please see ITRD E135207.

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Publication

Library number
C 43194 (In: C 42993 CD-ROM) /72 / ITRD E135426
Source

In: Proceedings of the European Transport Conference ETC, Strasbourg, France, 18-20 September 2005, Research to Inform Decision-Making in Transport Innovative Methods In Transport Analysis - Planning And Appraisal Networks. 2005. 0 p.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.