With perceptible glee, industry officials announced in their
year-end reports that China has overtaken Japan to become the
world's second largest vehicle market after the United States.
Of the 6 million or so motor vehicles sold nationwide last year,
nearly 400,000 units have ended up on the roads of Beijing, a city
that already looks like a gigantic car park.
The double-digit growth in vehicle sales does not augur well for
a city as polluted and congested as Beijing.
It's beyond doubt that Beijing is one of the most polluted
cities in the world, though city officials have categorically
rejected it being rated the worst.
Air quality gets even poorer in the winter heating season when
thousands of coal-fired furnaces kick into gear. While coal
combustion is a traditional and major source of pollution, a
growing share of the suspended particulates floating above the city
comes from vehicular emissions.
Experts put this contribution at well over 30 percent, making
vehicles the second single largest source of pollution.
Pollution aside, the explosive increase in car ownership is set
to further clog the city's already congested roads.
For the city's residents, rush hour is no longer confined to the
two periods of the day when people travel to or from work or
school. Every hour is, in fact, rush hour inside the Third Ring
Road, where streams of vehicles crawl bumper-to-bumper at an
average speed of 10 kilometers an hour, slower than the 12
kilometers for cyclists.
To minimize gridlock, city authorities are sweating their guts
out to pave new roads for a growing fleet of vehicles, getting
closer to the 3-million mark by the day.
The city plans to have 16,000 kilometers of roads by 2010, an
increase of 1,276 kilometers from 2005. Upon completion of these
roads, the authorities hope to increase the average speed of
vehicles on arterial roads up to 20 kilometers per hour in rush
hour.
But with nearly 400,000 vehicles hitting the roads annually, the
authorities will soon realize that they'll never build enough
roads, and never fast enough.
The only plausible answer lies in the promotion of public
transport.
Two and half decades back when cars were a rare sight, Beijing
seemed to have the widest roads and the highest public transport
ridership in the world. So why are people shunning public transport
now?
Though there might be very many answers to the question, the
city's public transport system no longer lives up to commuters'
expectations. It is not convenient, comfortable or efficient.
To have a sound public transport system, Beijing needs to look
no further than Hong Kong for a role model.
In the country's most affluent city, more than 80 percent of
residents choose to commute by a matrix of public transport systems
which include two high capacity railways, trams, buses, minibuses,
taxis and ferries. But only 29 percent of Beijingers do
likewise.
With a per capita gross domestic product of more than $26,000,
Hongkongers could have bought more cars than their Beijing
brethren, who have just reached the $7,000 mark. As a matter of
fact, there are only a little over half a million vehicles on the
streets of a city of 7 million people.
Whopping parking fees and fuel costs make car ownership an
expensive privilege.
When public transport offers the comfort of air conditioning,
convenience and fair price, there are enough incentives for
Hongkongers not to own their own cars.
An encouraging message is that the Beijing municipal government
has just taken a series of measures to improve the city's public
transport, which we hope will be attractive enough to lure back
commuters.
(China Daily January 19, 2007)