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On-demand transportation can help solve the urban mobility crisis

06 December 2019

A new study by Boston Consulting Group takes a close look at on-demand microtransit, with results decidedly showing that “on-demand transit services work,” helping cities reduce traffic by up to 15-30 percent while providing a more efficient and comfortable way of travelling.

Rather than fighting urban mobility challenges, ride-hailing services are sometimes contributing to them. Fortunately, cities facing declining public transportation usage and increasing traffic gridlock now have a solution proven to decrease congestion, reduce pollution, increase economic mobility, and get people out of private vehicles: on-demand microtransit.

That’s according to four lead researchers at Boston Consulting Group, a global management consulting firm operating in more than 50 countries. In the organisation’s newest report, On-Demand Transit Can Unlock Urban Mobility, analysts studied four unique on-demand, dynamically routed, multi-passenger transit projects over the course of a year.

Researchers explain that the results are straightforward: on-demand transit offers an effective way for cities to maximise the value and ridership of existing transit systems.

“Our study showed that on-demand transit services work,” researchers concluded in the study. “In the right regulatory context, with lower per-passenger subsidies than those provided to comparable public services, these initiatives can benefit passengers and cities alike. Their convenience and flexibility improve the user experience over fixed-route mass transit while bringing good jobs within reach of neighbourhoods poorly served by the status quo. They also generate less congestion and pollution than solo passenger travel.”

BCG researchers analysed four services: Arlington On-Demand in Arlington, Texas; Via to Transit in Seattle, Washington; West Sacramento On-Demand in West Sacramento, California; and BerlKönig in Berlin, Germany—all of which are Via Transportation partnerships, though Via did not sponsor the report.

During the year-long endeavour, analysts evaluated a wide variety of factors to determine their final recommendation. They examined metrics like the quality and efficiency of the service, whether the transit network competed with or complemented existing public transportation, and if it decreased traffic congestion and pollution.

Complementing existing transit

BCG notes that ride-hailing services often compete with mass transit, citing a study in Boston that showed that more than 40 percent of passengers would have taken public transit if a ride-hailing service had not been available.

“On-demand transit services, on the other hand, can improve mass-transit usage when operators and local authorities work together,” wrote the researchers. “Services dedicated to the first and last mile, such as Seattle’s Via to Transit service and a similar pilot in Los Angeles, provide rides to and from public transit stations. Seattle riders can travel seamlessly using their light-rail fare card in Via vehicles. Even the more generic zonal on-demand transit services, meant to provide better transportation coverage, are helping to feed passengers to mass transit. In Arlington, 27 percent of the trips have been to or from the regional commuter rail station.”

Reducing pollution

The report highlights that transportation accounts for 29 percent of US greenhouse gas emissions, more than any other industry, with personal cars being the primary culprit. BCG notes that the fight against climate change cannot be won without making drastic changes.

“On-demand transit can be a powerful ally in this effort. Despite using gas-powered vans, the West Sacramento and Arlington services annually save an estimated 60 and 150 tons of CO2 emissions, respectively, by aggregating passengers into shared vehicles and eliminating solo trips.”

The authors also note that with a limited number of vehicles in only part of Arlington, the on-demand service there was able to reduce emissions in the entire Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington region by 0.45 percent, which was “nearly twice as effective as other efforts.”

Decreasing congestion

Traffic congestion decreases quality of life and economic productivity. In an effort to mitigate congestion, London, New York, and other cities have implemented congestion charge policies to disincentivise vehicle travel in city centres. In their report, BCG cites on-demand transit as another tool at cities’ disposal, stating that:

“By pooling passengers, on-demand transit services can go a long way toward reducing the number of vehicle miles travelled,” BCG wrote. “In Arlington, for example, the service helped eliminate nearly 400,000 miles of travel that would have occurred if the passengers had driven solo, corresponding to a reduction of 36 percent of total vehicle miles travelled.”

Increasing economic mobility

By improving and extending the reach of public transit and providing people a convenient and affordable way to travel, on-demand transit also helps connect people to jobs, healthcare, education, and civic activities.

As noted by the BCG report, these services’ “convenience and flexibility improve the user experience over fixed-route mass transit while bringing good jobs within reach of neighbourhoods poorly served by the status quo.”

A recent BCG study in Paris showed that residents in the wealthiest 10 percent of neighbourhoods have access to three times more qualified jobs via public transit than residents in the bottom 50 percent of neighbourhoods.

On-demand transit is here to stay

Beyond congestion mitigation, pollution reduction, and mass transit system enhancement, Boston Consulting Group’s study demonstrates that on-demand transit is not merely a trend, but is rather a game changing tool that is here to stay.

“For a century, mass transit and private cars have served different needs in the urban mobility landscape,” the study reports. “Mass transit was designed to move as many people as possible at the lowest out-of-pocket cost for passengers, while cars offered flexibility and freedom. But neither is working effectively in most cities.”

For the first time, the public sector can provide the convenience and flexibility of a private vehicle at a fraction of the cost. On-demand transit–through which we can increase transportation access, provide a premium level of customer service, and collect and analyse an unprecedented amount of data–revolutionises what mass transit can be.