Re: News & Discussion: Transport Projects
Posted: Fri Sep 20, 2013 10:49 am
Excellent article by Michael Roddan in BRW, based on comments by Urban Planning expert, Dr Alan March.
Dr March questions the wisdom of infrastructure spending with a major focus on roads, rather than public transport (and other infrastructure spending eg health, education).
Part of the BRW article is reproduced below.
To sum up:
http://zite.to/18eDZQs
Dr March questions the wisdom of infrastructure spending with a major focus on roads, rather than public transport (and other infrastructure spending eg health, education).
Part of the BRW article is reproduced below.
.....Experts question Coalition's roads investment plan.
...incoming Treasurer, Joe Hockey has announced plans to stimulate the jobs market with increased investment into roads infrastructure over the next 12 to 18 months.
But an urban planning expert has warned that building roads will cost the economy, too – in a very different way.
The Coalition comes to office on the back of plans to fund big-ticket road projects such as Melbourne’s East-West Link and the WestConnex tunnel in Sydney.
But the Coalition’s electoral commitment to building “the roads of the 21st Century” comes at a questionable time, says Dr Alan March, associate dean of Melbourne University’s planning faculty, who argues more investment in public transport is required.
“An economy based on roads is an expensive way to run an economy,” says March. “Our old transport services don’t match our current business interests.”
New figures from the NSW Government Bureau of Transport Statistics show public transport journeys are becoming the first choice for more people. Trips made by train have increased by 23 per cent in the decade to 2012, while car trips increased by only 6 per cent. Bus travel also grew by 16 per cent.
March says there’s a clear shortfall in Australian cities in investing in infrastructure, particularly in public transport, but also in public hospitals and schools.
When you add together all of the different factors, says March, investing purely in roads is not a sensible approach. He points to factors such as peak oil, with continually increasing petrol prices, Australia’s large carbon footprint, and problems with our changing demographics.
Australia’s aging population will mean that fewer people will be able to drive in the future, not to mention health issues associated with increased commutes, such as obesity and diabetes, March says.
To sum up:
Read more:Just investing in freeways is misguided, reckons March. “It’s easier in the short term, but it never fixes transport problems in the long term. If we’re building a car-based city, we’ll miss other opportunities and our cities become less fair – it becomes harder to provide everyone the same opportunities.
http://zite.to/18eDZQs