BEIJING, Oct. 23-- The tax move is a good first step for the country
toward an energy-efficient and environment-friendly economy, while helping to
save fuel and thus increase energy security.
Having been in Beijing for the whole of the very successful 29th Olympiad
in August, and then attended the Urban Transportation Management Forum organized
by the Shenzhen municipal government to talk to their planning bureau about the
experience of congestion charging in London, l was struck by the possibility of
introducing congestion charging to Beijing itself.
Such measures increasingly need to be considered in response to the
necessity both of reducing congestion and also of improving air quality in
Beijing, particularly after the successful short-term measures undertaken during
the Olympics have come to an end.
Certainly the clear blue skies in Beijing at the end of the Olympics were
impressive, particularly after the concerns expressed by some about the possible
adverse effects of air pollution on the performance of top athletes.
The latter of course did not materialize, as we saw 43 world records and
more than 120 Olympic records shattered in the course of the Games. Credit here
should go to the initiatives taken by the city authorities to improve the air
quality in Beijing over the period of the Olympics, which was essentially
achieved by providing better and cheaper public transport and by implementing
the odd-even license plate restriction that allowed the city's 3.3 million
private car owners to drive only on alternate days.
The success of the latter scheme interestingly led to calls for its
retention after the end of the Olympics and the authorities have announced that
it will be reintroduced on a temporary basis whenever pollution rises to high
levels.
In the case of public transport, Zhou Zhengyu, deputy director of the
Beijing Municipal Committee of Communications during the Olympics, announced
that the reduced ticket prices brought in for the duration of the Games would be
extended for some considerable time afterward.
Remember that in Beijing there was a cut in the standard price of a bus
ticket by 60 percent for regular passengers and 80 percent for students. And
last October, the price of a single journey subway ticket was slashed by 30
percent to 2 yuan.
So, not surprisingly, as a result of the cheaper fares and traffic control
measures introduced for the Olympics, the proportion of Beijing residents using
public transport on a daily basis rose from 35 percent to 45 percent.
The national government initiative since the beginning of September to
raise taxes on big cars and reduce them on smaller ones, in order to save energy
and cut pollution, will also contribute to improving the quality of life in
Beijing.
Owners of cars with engines above 4 liters capacity will have to pay 40
percent tax, double the existing rate. The tax for cars between 3 and 4 liters
will rise from 15 to 25 percent, while those below 1liter capacity will be
reduced from 3 to 1 percent.
Furthermore, the tax move is a good first step for the country toward an
energy-efficient and environment-friendly economy, while helping to save fuel
and thus increase energy security.
Yet Beijing will still be home to about 3.3 million cars, and the figure is
growing by 300,000 a year. The only solution to this challenge is the continuous
development of the city's public transport system along the lines already
implemented by the authorities, but with one addition - congestion charging that
will ration road space by price, so that the marginal cost of an additional trip
by a car owner will be paramount in their minds.
The introduction of such a scheme in London in 2002 by the then Mayor Ken
Livingstone has reduced the number of vehicles entering central London by 70,000
a day. This has produced real benefits for the city, not only by cutting key
traffic pollutants but also by improving public transport capacity and
performance, and reducing road traffic casualties.
The geography of Beijing, with its various ring roads, would lend itself
very easily to congestion charging. A congestion charge zone could be introduced
within either Ring Road 2 or 3 at the beginning and then be extended outward
depending on the success of the scheme and public demand for it.
As in London, in order to win public support, the funds raised from the
congestion charge would have to be seen to be reinvested into public transport,
and some exemptions or at least a discount rate might have to be granted to
residents within the charge zone.
Nevertheless, the scheme could be put into operation very quickly using
simple technology like closed-circuit television at the entry points off the
ring roads and camera enforcement using a database of car licenses.
So l look forward to one day visiting Beijing again and seeing road
congestion charging, or at least another variant of road pricing, being
implemented to improve the quality of life for Beijingers. This should be the
icing on the cake, on top of the outstanding investment already undertaken by
the authorities, and would be consistent with the Chinese government's focus on
people-centered and scientific methods of development.
(Source: China Daily)
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