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The tram was a ‘solution’ looking for a problem

Public transport use dropped from 6.9 per cent in 2016 to 5.9 per cent in 2021 despite the more than $1.7 billion expenditure commitment on tram infrastructure and services.

JON STANHOPE and KHALID AHMED explain how Stage 1 of the light rail project is an economic failure and that Stage 2 is certain to be a greater failure, with serious questions about procurement without a competitive process. 

OF the “problems” identified in the business case for ACT Light Rail – Stage 1, that the project was designed to address, Problem 1 was specified as “the need to build future alternative transport capacity”.

The discussion of the problem in Section 4.2.2.1 of the business case referred to:

  • Traffic congestion and slow travel times, in particular along the Northbourne Avenue and Federal Highway corridor; and
  • Reduced accessibility by individuals who do not own a car, which in turn carries with it social equity issues. 

Travel time savings are typically the largest component of the economic benefits of a transport infrastructure project. Time saved in travel is available for productive economic activity, or for leisure activities with quantifiable social and wellbeing benefits. 

Transport infrastructure has a long life, and any such project should involve an assessment of evolving needs and an eye on emerging technologies. While it is unclear what is meant by “alternative transport capacity” in the problem definition included in the business case, reference to future needs may be a reasonable starting point. 

However, we have not been able to find in the business case a single reference to electric vehicles, autonomous guidance or trackless trams – technologies that were emerging at the time the business case was prepared.

The total exclusion of future alternative technologies in the business case is, we think, best explained by the terms of the Labor/Greens Parliamentary Agreement for the 8th Legislative Assembly signed on  November 2, 2012. Clause 2.2 (Appendix 1) of the agreement provides:

2.2 Progress a light rail network for Canberra by:

  1. a) Establishing a statutory independent authority to implement the light rail project and associated development in the corridor;
  2. b) undertaking the necessary design studies, preparatory works, financing, procurement and tendering arrangements, with a target date for the laying of tracks for the first route commencing in 2016;
  3. c) Creating a Canberra wide light rail network master plan.

The “solution” was therefore “locked-in” well before the business case for light rail was developed. In other words, light rail became a “solution” looking for a “problem”.

Early lock-in and exclusion of alternatives is not the only concern with the process employed in advancing this project. 

Clause 9 in Appendix 4 of the agreement stipulated that a Public Private Partnership would be created for the procurement and financing of the project. A commitment such as this to the expenditure of unspecified funds without testing the market for procurement and financing, and without any prior public scrutiny of the delivery mechanisms, raises serious questions about both governance arrangements and the probity of the expenditure of public monies.

The extent to which the project has addressed “transport problems”, and in particular reduced car use, can be assessed through the travel mode data published by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

The illustrated table is drawn from the Census data for 2016 and 2021 and shows that of the approximately 43,000 additional employed people, more than 16,000 used cars as their main method of travel.

The use of public transport, bus and tram combined, remained unchanged as measured by the number of people (a mere increase of 285), with tram patronage being largely offset by a decrease in bus use.

Measuring by share, public transport use dropped from 6.9 per cent in 2016 to 5.9 per cent in 2021 despite the more than $1.7 billion expenditure commitment on tram infrastructure and services. 

Car use declined from 69.6 per cent to 64 per cent largely as a result of an increase in the proportion of people working from home, up from 3.1 per cent in 2016 to 10.9 per cent in 2021. The largest change (increase) in proportionate terms as well as in actual numbers was in people working from home, increasing from 3.1 per cent in 2016 to 10.9 per cent in 2021.

Although the lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic were a catalyst for such a significant change, there has been a trend of flexible working arrangements being offered to workers supported by increasing bandwidth and improvements in technology platforms. Along with this trend, at least in some part the steep increase in the proportion of people working from home, is likely to continue.

The transport benefits of the project, assessed by the auditor-general as returning just 49 cents for every dollar spent, are almost certain to be much less in view of the above patronage figures and the additional costs that were not included in the original business case. 

Social equity and access benefits envisaged could hardly have been delivered when public housing households were dislocated to meet the densification and financing objectives.

Although an ex-post cost-benefit analysis has not been performed, it is clear that Stage 1 of the project is an economic failure. 

Stage 2 is certain to be a greater failure due to (a) the technical complexities of the route, which will significantly increase costs, (b) potentially negative transport benefits due to increase (rather than decrease) in journey times; (c) trend increase in flexible work arrangements; (d) any densification benefits along the route being strongly contested by the community, and in any event, not dependent on the project; and (e) alternative technologies maturing further and being much more cost-effective.

The ACT government is apparently locked into a provider for Stage 2, and indeed for further stages should it continue to pursue the network across the city. This raises serious questions about the efficacy and appropriateness of procurement without a competitive process.

 

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Jon Stanhope

Jon Stanhope

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10 Responses to The tram was a ‘solution’ looking for a problem

Bill Gemmell says: 17 May 2023 at 8:27 am

Whoever first coined the phrase “lies, damned lies and statistics” must have anticipated this piece by our disgruntled former Chief Minister. The reality is that the official data is not fit for purpose and provides limited confidence.

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Lt.Fred says: 17 May 2023 at 8:59 am

There really is not very much in this and it’s not clear why anyone should take it seriously. The idea that there is some new magical technology just around the corner that will render rail obsolete is extreme wishful thinking, and is not borne out by the decisions of the world’s best standard public transport systems in Europe and Asia, which continue to invest mostly in new rail, not in “trackless” trams or other inferior technological mirages. (This logic is never applied, by the way, to the decision to spend multiples the cost of the light rail system on new highways in Canberra; the status quo will never be supplanted by some new magic technology, just its alternatives, apparently).

Light rail’s biggest constraint is that it currently only will take you to a limited number of destinations, hence its limited usefulness and limited ridership. But LR opponents can’t criticise it for this because the solution is obvious: build more, and do it really fast.

It’s clear what problem light rail was designed to solve: a lack of frequent, reliable and affordable public transport connections within Canberra that people will use, so as to provide a serious alternative form of transport to the car. It successfully solved that problem in one area. Now that the system exists, it’s clear that a single system operating everywhere is the most efficient way to solve it everywhere. Opponents are not in fact proposing an alternative way of achieving this objective – they in fact do not believe there needs to be an alternative to the car. They should make their case in those terms.

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Scott says: 19 May 2023 at 12:12 pm

Wow, a lot of strong conclusions, no actual factual basis.. did you write the deeply flawed tram document?

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Curious Canberran says: 17 May 2023 at 6:53 pm

I’d guess more than 70% of Canberrans don’t want to catch a bus/LR if they have a choice – they love their car.
To think people will give up their car is what i’d call “extreme wishful thinking” no matter how many buses/LR there is.

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Lt.Fred says: 18 May 2023 at 5:39 am

Right. And that’s how you should make your case against public transport – stuff the planet, we have no hope, we just love the car no matter what. It’s just wishful thinking to imagine Canberrans might behave like human beings everywhere else in the world when given the option – there’s just something in the water or whatever. Let’s just endlessly pour trillions into subsidising the car at the expense of everything else, forever (cars being by far the most inefficient form of transport ever devised). That’s actually the case and good on you for making it honestly.

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Scott says: 19 May 2023 at 12:14 pm

Cars aren’t ‘destroying’ the planet, using petrol is.. simply switching to clean fuel totally wipes away the emotional arguments, like yours.

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LR Insider says: 17 May 2023 at 9:27 pm

The authors make some valid points, but overlook the city-making benefit afforded by fixed transport infrastructure. It should proceed.

The bigger issue, however, is the ability of ACT Govt to deliver such infrastructure. A strategic mistake was made in the procurement of LRS1, namely to select a consortium which is made almost entirely of foreign-owned construction companies. This has stymied the ability of Govt to progress LRS2a. Auditors will ultimately confirm LRS2a is outrageously over budget and unconscionably late. And the same incompetence has led to Woden Transport Interchange project floundering as it lurches from one contractor to another.

We should be looking closely at the competence of the people charged with delivering LR. Therein lies the story.

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Trevor says: 18 May 2023 at 1:36 am

And the same ACT Government idiots are now also wanting to show us all how good they are at taking over, demolishing and then building a new hospital. The trouble is they can’t run or even maintain the existing Canberra Hospital.

This ACT LaborGreen government is incompetent, deceitful, dishonest and far from being remotely accountable or transparent.

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Curious Canberran says: 18 May 2023 at 2:12 pm

Yes, Lt.Fred that’s right – just being honest. Put all the politics aside, the money, the ‘doom & gloom’, etc… I don’t believe most (not all) people will use or embrace the LR (and buses) here in Canberra to the extent some want – that’s just saying how it is. That’s because people have a choice. And if they choose to spend money on an electric car that they ‘love’, well they can do that too.

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Adrian Glamorgan says: 23 May 2023 at 5:40 am

The writer skids over covid as if it hadn’t been a major factor for public transport around the world. The same dip happened with Perth. Pandemics are hopefully a special influence that no one spoke about ahead of time. If we are to talk reliable prognostication, the author should remind us of his own role in promoting a Gungahlin freeway system, and how earlier governments were fooled by the land developers to put in a city northwards without properly preparing the means to travel to where the work was in the rest of Canberra.

Nevertheless, having just been visiting Geneva, and seeing the great contribution their extending tram system is having on making car drivers think again about driving, I wonder whether car-driving will always be the preference for Canberrans. Cars aren’t about travel, they are about convenience, the “what if I decide to come home at a different time?” factor. Don’t think car ads roaming free on rugged ridges and empty highways – think the reality of hot days trying to find car parks, the inching through peak hour, the cost of parking. A safe, frequent, reliable public transport gives to the traveller much of what car driving takes away. Give me light rail any time!

I look forward to the next stages being implemented. It’s a shame that political balance requires Stage 2 to straddle the hardest part of the network, the lake, and I still wish that the Belconnen to Airport and towards Fyshwick, and green corridor there with Kingston Railway, could be started as they could shape the city in exciting ways. Still, building a city infrastructure to last the next hundred years or so doesn’t happen in a single election cycle!

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