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Friday, May 23, 2025

ECLAC study:

Traffic imposes heavy burden on T&T

by

Geisha Kowlessar-Alonzo
491 days ago
20240118
Flashback 2022: A pedestrian crosses the Beetham Highway’s eastbound lane in the vicinity of Bhagwansingh’s Hardware in gridlock traffic.

Flashback 2022: A pedestrian crosses the Beetham Highway’s eastbound lane in the vicinity of Bhagwansingh’s Hardware in gridlock traffic.

Abraham-Diaz

GEISHA KOW­LESSAR-ALON­ZO

Ve­hi­cle traf­fic con­ges­tion im­pos­es a di­rect eco­nom­ic bur­den of rough­ly 1.37 per cent of an­nu­al GDP on T&T.

This mea­sure rep­re­sents a low­er bound es­ti­mate of eco­nom­ic costs, giv­en that it does not in­clude oth­er so­cial and en­vi­ron­men­tal costs typ­i­cal­ly as­so­ci­at­ed with the phe­nom­e­non, ac­cord­ing to an as­sess­ment pub­lished this month by the Eco­nom­ic Com­mis­sion for Latin Amer­i­ca and the Caribbean (UN­ECLAC) ti­tled, “As­sess­ment of the eco­nom­ic costs of ve­hi­cle traf­fic con­ges­tion in the Caribbean: a case study of T&T.”

Au­thored by Willard Phillips, Eliz­a­beth Thorne and Es­ther Chong Ling, the 51-page doc­u­ment al­so not­ed that traf­fic chal­lenges are al­so like­ly to have im­por­tant pub­lic pol­i­cy im­pli­ca­tions for this coun­try, as it seeks to im­ple­ment strate­gies for mit­i­gat­ing the prob­lem in the fu­ture.

The study find­ings ex­plained that af­ter three months, 264 re­spon­dents com­plet­ed the on­line sur­vey, yield­ing a re­sponse rate of 52.8 per cent.

Fifty-six per cent of re­spon­dents were fe­male with the re­main­der be­ing male.

The ma­jor­i­ty (83 per cent) com­mut­ed at least three times per week and did so by self-dri­ven pri­vate ve­hi­cle (81 per cent).

It al­so not­ed that con­sid­er­ing com­mut­ing ex­pens­es, re­spon­dents spent an av­er­age of $1,037 every month on fu­el/bus or taxi fares.

Fur­ther, ac­cord­ing to its analy­sis, the study ex­plained, “Giv­en the week­ly av­er­age time lost from the sur­vey, to­tal an­nu­al time lost per work­er for T&T was es­ti­mat­ed at 793 hours. This ap­prox­i­mates to 16 hours per work­er for each work week.

“Us­ing hourly wage rates par­ti­tioned across the to­tal labour par­tic­i­pa­tion rate for 2021, the di­rect eco­nom­ic cost for traf­fic con­ges­tion in T&T was es­ti­mat­ed at $2.26 bil­lion for 2021 or rough­ly 1.37 per cent of an­nu­al. From the analy­sis, it is ap­par­ent that time lost to pro­fes­sion­als and tech­ni­cians, re­sults in the high­est eco­nom­ic bur­den due to traf­fic con­ges­tion in the econ­o­my.”

The sur­vey al­so de­tailed spa­tial im­pacts.

It not­ed that com­muters re­port­ed an av­er­age of two lo­ca­tions where they faced sig­nif­i­cant traf­fic con­ges­tion in their dai­ly com­mute.

It ex­plained that con­sis­tent with the dis­tri­b­u­tion of pop­u­la­tion and the evolved trans­porta­tion net­work, the most in­tense traf­fic con­ges­tion was ex­pe­ri­enced in the more dense­ly pop­u­lat­ed ar­eas of the coun­try.

“Tak­ing a re­gion­al per­spec­tive, tran­sit routes along the main north-south high­way (Uri­ah But­ler High­way), and the main road­ways of the East-West cor­ri­dor (Churchill Roo­sevelt High­way, East­ern Main Road, Au­drey Jef­fers High­way and West­ern Main Road) en­dure the brunt of the traf­fic con­ges­tion on the is­land of Trinidad.

“A sig­nif­i­cant lev­el of con­ges­tion al­so oc­curs along the main ar­te­r­i­al road­ways of the south­west penin­su­la which con­nect to the south­ern in­dus­tri­al city of San Fer­nan­do. Among the specif­i­cal­ly recog­nised, in­tense­ly con­gest­ed tran­sit routes are Ch­agua­nas to Port of Spain; Ch­agua­nas to Cou­va; Ari­ma to Port-of-Spain; Port-of-Spain to Diego Mar­tin; and San Fer­nan­do to Point Fortin.

“Less in­tense, but equal­ly sig­nif­i­cant traf­fic con­ges­tion, al­so oc­curs in re­gion­al towns and mu­nic­i­pal­i­ties such as San­gre Grande in the North-East; and Pe­nal; Siparia; Debe, and Princes Town in the South-Cen­tral re­gions of Trinidad,” the study fur­ther ex­plained.

In the case of To­ba­go, the study not­ed that while traf­fic con­ges­tion is com­par­a­tive­ly less com­pared to Trinidad, most traf­fic con­ges­tion is ex­pe­ri­enced in the South-West of the is­land along Mil­ford Road, and the con­nect­ing Claude Noel High­way.

“These two road­ways form the main ar­te­r­i­al con­nec­tion of the more dense­ly pop­u­lat­ed south­west, with the is­land’s cap­i­tal at Scar­bor­ough. Ad­di­tion­al traf­fic con­ges­tion is al­so rou­tine­ly ob­served on main sub­urb con­nect­ing routes such as Scar­bor­ough to Calder Hall, and Scar­bor­ough to Mount Marie,” the as­sess­ment stat­ed.

The study de­tailed that sev­er­al sea­son­al events im­pact on traf­fic con­ges­tion in T&T, cit­ing that among them, the rainy sea­son and Christ­mas hol­i­days gen­er­ate in­creas­es in an­nu­al per capi­ta traf­fic de­lays of 9.3 and 8.9 hours re­spec­tive­ly, while the an­nu­al school clo­sures re­duce traf­fic de­lays by rough­ly 7.7 hours an­nu­al­ly.

Al­so, it not­ed that the an­nu­al Car­ni­val sea­son (5.0 hours), as well as month ends (5.6 hours) al­so sig­nif­i­cant­ly in­crease traf­fic con­ges­tion dur­ing the year.

Avert­ing be­hav­iour and oth­er costs

Ac­cord­ing to the sur­vey, in the face of en­dur­ing traf­fic con­ges­tion, com­muters typ­i­cal­ly adopt cop­ing strate­gies to mit­i­gate im­pacts.

Such avert­ing be­hav­iour, it said, may re­sult in ad­di­tion­al ex­pen­di­ture such as food, su­per­vi­so­ry care for chil­dren, com­mu­ni­ca­tions, or af­ter-work ac­tiv­i­ties.

In the case of T&T, sur­vey re­spon­dents re­port­ed an av­er­age month­ly ad­di­tion­al costs of $558 to meet such ex­pens­es.

This amounts to an ad­di­tion­al an­nu­al ex­pense of $6,696 per capi­ta and rep­re­sents a fur­ther eco­nom­ic bur­den of traf­fic con­ges­tion in the coun­try.

Pol­i­cy im­pli­ca­tions and con­clu­sions

In its con­clud­ing chap­ter, the as­sess­ment stat­ed that the most im­por­tant pol­i­cy im­pli­ca­tion which arouse from the study’s find­ings was the lev­el of pub­lic sec­tor in­vest­ment that would like­ly be nec­es­sary to mit­i­gate the ve­hi­cle traf­fic con­ges­tion chal­lenge in T&T.

“An op­por­tu­ni­ty cost, mea­sured in this in­stance as a di­rect eco­nom­ic bur­den of 1.37 per cent of an­nu­al GDP is not triv­ial, and rep­re­sents a con­sid­er­able eco­nom­ic ben­e­fit that the coun­try rou­tine­ly fore­goes each year be­cause of ve­hi­cle traf­fic con­ges­tion.

“This is brought in­to sharp­er re­lief if it is con­sid­ered that the es­ti­mate close­ly ap­proach­es the GDP con­tri­bu­tion (cur­rent prices) of the agri­cul­ture, forestry and fish­ing sub­sec­tor (1.5 per cent), and is 12 per cent of the GDP con­tri­bu­tion for the pe­tro­le­um and chem­i­cal prod­ucts sub­sec­tor (11 per cent) in 2021 (CSO, 2023). More­over, in the con­text of the pre­vail­ing dy­nam­ics dis­cussed above, it is rea­son­able to ex­pect that these costs would con­tin­ue to in­crease over the medi­um to long term,” it said.

The as­sess­ment sug­gest­ed that pol­i­cy op­tions for con­sid­er­a­tion over the short to medi­um term in­clude:

* The con­tin­u­ing ef­forts to strength­en pub­lic trans­porta­tion ser­vices, in­clud­ing strate­gies to make pub­lic trans­porta­tion ser­vices more ac­ces­si­ble and at­trac­tive to com­muters. In this re­gard, it ad­vised that an ex­am­i­na­tion of the prospects for en­hanc­ing the role of para-tran­sit ser­vice providers; ini­tia­tives to en­hance first and last mile trans­porta­tion op­tions; and ef­forts to im­prove pub­lic safe­ty of both com­muters and ser­vice providers are crit­i­cal;

• Wider adop­tion of telecom­mut­ing as an op­tion to re­duce the need for phys­i­cal com­mut­ing es­pe­cial­ly among the pro­fes­sion­al cat­e­gories of work­ers for whom this may be fea­si­ble;

• Fur­ther in­vest­ment in a school bus ser­vice which could mit­i­gate the school-gen­er­at­ed traf­fic con­ges­tion as­so­ci­at­ed with the dai­ly parental de­liv­ery and pick-up of school chil­dren;

• Ap­pli­ca­tion of bet­ter spa­tial plan­ning and traf­fic man­age­ment tools when plan­ning for an­nu­al and/or sea­son­al events.

Fur­ther, the as­sess­ment added that the prin­ci­pal long run strat­e­gy of im­ple­men­ta­tion of an ef­fi­cient, re­li­able, and mul­ti-modal pub­lic trans­porta­tion sys­tem, along with de­cen­tral­i­sa­tion of pub­lic ser­vices re­mains key to solv­ing the ve­hi­cle traf­fic con­ges­tion prob­lem in T&T.

“Such a strat­e­gy should be seen to be mov­ing per­sons off the phys­i­cal road­way, and on­to the dig­i­tal high­way. In this re­gard, dig­i­tal­ly sup­port­ed an­a­lyt­ics for sched­ul­ing, tar­iff­ing, fleet main­te­nance, and in­ter­modal con­nec­tiv­i­ty are crit­i­cal,” the study added.

Fi­nal­ly, it em­pha­sised that ef­forts to en­hance pub­lic safe­ty and se­cu­ri­ty would be cen­tral to sup­port­ing and en­cour­ag­ing the wide­spread use of pub­lic trans­porta­tion that would be a key re­quire­ment for al­le­vi­at­ing the ve­hi­cle traf­fic con­ges­tion prob­lem.


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