It appears likely that private cars in Nanjing will have to pay
a congestion charge if they enter certain downtown areas during
rush hours, according to the new Nanjing Metropolitan Transport
White Paper.
The White Paper has been sent to the Nanjing municipal
government for discussion and could be issued by the end of the
year, Jinling Evening News reported.
The White Paper lays out the principle of "public transport
first", with the goal of checking the spread of motor vehicles and
alleviating traffic congestion, according to sources with the
Nanjing Institute of City Transport Planning Co Ltd.
"The manipulation of economic levers will be an effective means
of controlling the number of motor vehicles entering downtown
areas," an expert was quoted as saying by Jinling Evening News.
The proposal to charge a congestion fee is included in the White
Paper. But the expert said such a step was not yet necessary,
describing the move as "the last straw when we don't have any other
choices".
"We are still in the talking stages, and the details will be
issued soon," said an official with the Nanjing development and
reform commission, the governmental department in charge. The
official asked to remain anonymous.
Ma Hong, a professor at Nanjing University of Traditional
Chinese Medicine, said she did not approve of the measure.
"More attention should be paid to the infrastructure of public
transportation," she told China Daily.
She added that she often spent 20 minutes sitting in traffic on
her way to the office.
According to the principles laid out in the White Paper, people
hoping to park in downtown areas or during rush hours should face
higher fees, and roadside parking lots should charge higher fees
than underground parking lots.
As of the end of last year, there were 732,000 motor vehicles in
Nanjing, of which 239,000 were private cars (more than four times
as many as in 2002). Monitors on major roads have also recorded
increasingly serious traffic jams since 2004.
The White Paper predicted that if no measures were taken, the
total number of motor vehicles in Nanjing would soar to 1 million
by 2010. Half of them would be private cars.
The number of private cars in Nanjing has been mounting at a
speed of 350 per day this year, said a staff member of the Nanjing
Institute of City Transport Planning Co Ltd.
Nanjing is the third city to publish a Metropolitan Transport
White Paper, after Beijing and Shanghai. Beijing's White Paper was
issued in 2004.
(China Daily July 13, 2007)