User pay per km
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User pay per km
Postby malnar » Tue Jun 05, 2018 10:48 am
An interviewee from an infrastructure think tank said that the 30 odd cents per litre petrol excise is for building roads which I don't think is directly correct. I think it goes into general revenue.
Somehow the figure of 10c per km was arrived at. The callers were hysterical about the injustice & inequity of it all & of course Neil Mitchell said "push bikes" should not be exempt from paying.
I would anticipate people like N Mitchell classifying electric cars and bicycles together as "fuel free vehicles" which must be taxed on parity with the guzzlers.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby march83 » Tue Jun 05, 2018 11:10 am
I guess the government will give me some sort of free Garmin GPS with de-personalized uploading facilities in order to track this sort of thing, right? And they can totally trust me to make sure to keep the battery charged I guess without a screen the battery would last a lot longer.
User pays systems on the road are interesting and all, but the requirement for roads is significantly driven by our need to transport food around - whether you drive or not, you rely on roads in order to stock the shelves at the local supermarket. Additionally Colesworth and the like are making profits by using said roads. Everyone needs to pay so an exclusively user pays system is imbalanced.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby uart » Tue Jun 05, 2018 12:28 pm
It's actually more like 39 cents per litre (39.6 on normal unleaded and about 35.9 on E10) in excise, and yeah most of it goes to general revenue.malnar wrote:H
An interviewee from an infrastructure think tank said that the 30 odd cents per litre petrol excise is for building roads which I don't think is directly correct. I think it goes into general revenue.
Somehow the figure of 10c per km was arrived at.
Even at 39c though, that 10c per km charge is equivalent to a car that gets only 3.9 km/L (26L/100km)! My Prius gets nearly 25 km/L (4 L/100k), that's an equivalent of only 1.6 cents per km in excise.
An average passenger car these days gets about 8 L/100 km, and at that rate the per km charge should only be about 3 cents per km.
BTW. Some state in the US went down this route and specifically penalized cars (petrol cars, not electric) that were too efficient. Some of these were later repealed but I'm not sure if all of them.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby uart » Tue Jun 05, 2018 12:38 pm
Yep, the rego levy for passenger cars has always been based on TARE weight, so it would be totally consistent to do the same for this charge (and otherwise pedestrians would have to pay). That means weight of bike excluding rider, so 1/200th (0.5%) sounds about right. Wow finally an incentive for a super light weight bike .march83 wrote:Cents per km per kilogram makes more sense, right? Even if it were just approximate weight by vehicle class. I'll more than happily pay my share which should be somewhere in the order of 0.5% of the rate for cars.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Leaf T » Tue Jun 05, 2018 12:39 pm
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Jmuzz » Tue Jun 05, 2018 1:07 pm
Toll based on car/truck/bike type and purpose, scheduled commute window, time of day, time onroad, distance, which road, which lane, premium speeds.
Australia won't do it first though so doesn't really matter.
UK will probably do it first, London is already most of the way there. Perhaps China too, they already have heavy tolling and zone restrictions and privacy issues don't exist (since already low privacy).
When Aus does consider that path there will be others to copy and all the theoretical arguments won't apply since there will be existing examples. Samsung or someone will be pumping out millions of tracker boxes so won't cost much to equip every vehicle.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Nate » Tue Jun 05, 2018 1:28 pm
There was a great paper from an economics guy a while ago which went into the depths of it - but its just not the way public infra works.
You all chip a bit in depending on the benefit to society.
Spend $2 on a bike lane & get a $4 benefit to society (Syd council numbers when they did their bike lanes a while ago)
Otherwise we'd never have xray & ct-scan machines either!
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Thoglette » Tue Jun 05, 2018 1:43 pm
I'm simply amazed that the insurers of logistics companies have not already insisted on this.Jmuzz wrote:I think smart GPS logging tolling is a 100% certainty over the next couple of decades.
Unless, of course, they are also benefiting from drivers breaking the rules.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby march83 » Tue Jun 05, 2018 2:12 pm
Can you link the paper, or discussion of? While I agree with you in principal, what about things like public transport? Imagine the trains if they were free? The current network couldn't deal with the extra demand leading to a poorer service for everyone - people would tolerate a lesser service to save money which is not ideal. I feel like some "usage fees" are better considered as "shaping fees" - a train ticket is a financial incentive to reduce load on the network and distribute it elsewhere (cars, buses, bikes); a road usage fee is a financial incentive to reduce load on the network rather than to directly pay for its upkeep.Nate wrote:You dont have a pay per use system for public infrastructure & services - it simply doesnt work.
There was a great paper from an economics guy a while ago which went into the depths of it - but its just not the way public infra works.
You all chip a bit in depending on the benefit to society.
Spend $2 on a bike lane & get a $4 benefit to society (Syd council numbers when they did their bike lanes a while ago)
Otherwise we'd never have xray & ct-scan machines either!
Of course these sorts of fees are regressive and hit the poorest hardest, but that's what rebates and deductions are for...
edit: not arguing for usage fees, just pointing out that they're not necessarily stupid.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby AdelaidePeter » Tue Jun 05, 2018 2:21 pm
But don't many public services work exactly that way? e.g. water, electricity, gas, phone, mail, ambulance, public transport... (though public transport is subsidised, and maybe some others too).Nate wrote:You dont have a pay per use system for public infrastructure & services - it simply doesnt work.
They're paid for by insurance, albeit public insurance here (Medicare).Nate wrote: Otherwise we'd never have xray & ct-scan machines either!
That said, I don't think it's viable for road usage yet, simply because of the amount of infrastructure required (a detector on every road?)
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Re: User pay per km
Postby uart » Tue Jun 05, 2018 3:22 pm
Yeah I've got to admit that I'm not looking forward to it, but I cant really think of any other way to levy these road usage charges once electric cars appear in large numbers.Jmuzz wrote:I think smart GPS logging tolling is a 100% certainty over the next couple of decades.
You can't really put the levy on electricity directly, because people use it for so many other purposes. Not to mention charging from solar installations.
One alternative though, maybe just add it onto rego based on the expected km travelled for that year? TBH this would be my preference.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby bychosis » Tue Jun 05, 2018 3:24 pm
I'd be very surprised if the businesses don't already have it installed on most vehicles. Heck, even Domino's pizza drivers have it. It is cheap and effective in managing your fleet. Some industries there is some backlash from drivers about big brother watching over them, but those business with profit priority over driver well being will have it installed regardless of the 'privacy' issues.Thoglette wrote:I'm simply amazed that the insurers of logistics companies have not already insisted on this.Jmuzz wrote:I think smart GPS logging tolling is a 100% certainty over the next couple of decades.
Unless, of course, they are also benefiting from drivers breaking the rules.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Comedian » Tue Jun 05, 2018 3:42 pm
Any type of GPS logger is likely to be quite difficult. It's one thing when a fleet is owned by a business and they choose to install something. It's another thing when the government mandates the installation of something into a private vehicle for taxation purposes. The first thing Joe average is going to do is try and bypass it so you are going to have to have monitoring and penalties. All of this complicated by the certainty that all vehicles are different. There are so many reasons why it's a nightmare.bychosis wrote:I'd be very surprised if the businesses don't already have it installed on most vehicles. Heck, even Domino's pizza drivers have it. It is cheap and effective in managing your fleet. Some industries there is some backlash from drivers about big brother watching over them, but those business with profit priority over driver well being will have it installed regardless of the 'privacy' issues.Thoglette wrote:I'm simply amazed that the insurers of logistics companies have not already insisted on this.Jmuzz wrote:I think smart GPS logging tolling is a 100% certainty over the next couple of decades.
Unless, of course, they are also benefiting from drivers breaking the rules.
It's going to be tempting for governments to tax key routes - because they have all they need now to do that. The concern is that this will encourage people away from main routes. It's a nightmare. Perhaps the government will move to control charging of electric cars - but that is full of problems too.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-01-15/e ... ng/9235564
Perhaps we should just forget about the fuel tax and see it as an electric car subsidy because they are pretty good for many things.
https://www.solarquotes.com.au/blog/ele ... subsidies/
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Thoglette » Tue Jun 05, 2018 3:44 pm
Of course it's viable. A large number of people provide that data to Google and Apple every day. And anyone who's worked on a large industrial site recently will tell you, IVMS is mature and cheap, if you want to DIY.AdelaidePeter wrote:That said, I don't think it's viable for road usage yet, simply because of the amount of infrastructure required (a detector on every road?)
Where to start? Probably the easiest place to look (outside any economics text book pre-Regan) would be search engine in The Conversation.march83 wrote:Can you link the paper, or discussion of?
One doesn't have to imagine. Over on the socialist side of the rabbit proof fence, many major cities have free public transport within the city limits. And all major sporting events now include "free" public transport.march83 wrote:While I agree with you in principal, what about things like public transport? Imagine the trains if they were free?
Yes, but we don't apply "usage fees" to cars - instead we set them as a sunk cost (rego, insurance, depreciation, garage).march83 wrote: I feel like some "usage fees" are better considered as "shaping fees" - a train ticket is a financial incentive to reduce load on the network
Cab fares, on the other hand, are immediate. And come a whole lot closer to capturing the real cost.
Finally, most public transport is at capacity for maybe 4 hours out of 24. At the same time the roads are chock-a-block. Your fee can not do any useful shaping at this point.
If we spent a fraction of what gets spent on roads and car parks (never mind cleaning up the mess and accidents) on pubic transport there'd be no "capacity problem" to deal with. Which nicely links in with....
Don't think. Read and researchmalnar wrote:An interviewee from an infrastructure think tank said that the 30 odd cents per litre petrol excise is for building roads which I don't think is directly correct. I think it goes into general revenue.
But you are correct: it goes to general revenue. As a population we (very, very) roughly sponsor roads by about $1K per motorvehicle, per year.
That excludes the cost of "free" parking which we include in every building and at every school, shopping precinct or roadside. Data on the direct cost of this is hard to find. But it's at least a few percent of the cost of construction work. What's that worth each year?
Nor does it pay for the roughly 1/4 of hospital bills ($17Bpa) which are associated directly with road trauma. Best estimate says that the "cost of road trauma" is somewhere north of $40B (the west). That's about $2000 per MV per year.
Everyone has slightly different numbers (and choses to include/exclude differnt things) but by and large there's agreement on the statements above - most road related organisations have some sort of publication (e.g. AAA cost of road trauma 2017) summarising the points. BITRE and ABS are also useful sources of raw data.
Then we could look at the indirect costs: obesity, pollution, loss of habit, opportunity cost on land use......
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Re: User pay per km
Postby AdelaidePeter » Tue Jun 05, 2018 4:07 pm
I was thinking enforcement. How do you ensure every car has a GPS, and stop people from removing or disabling it? That's why I was imagining that every road would need a detector, to detect vehicles without a sensor. As comes up on this board from time to time, it's hard enough to ensure that every car is even registered.Thoglette wrote:Of course it's viable. A large number of people provide that data to Google and Apple every day. And anyone who's worked on a large industrial site recently will tell you, IVMS is mature and cheap, if you want to DIY.AdelaidePeter wrote:That said, I don't think it's viable for road usage yet, simply because of the amount of infrastructure required (a detector on every road?)
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Jmuzz » Tue Jun 05, 2018 4:20 pm
It's pretty simple, just a box on the dash or even externally on the numberplate, even simpler if it has an external GPS antenna which can poke out from under bonnet, getting thin 12v wire to it is really no drama.Comedian wrote:
Any type of GPS logger is likely to be quite difficult. It's one thing when a fleet is owned by a business and they choose to install something. It's another thing when the government mandates the installation of something into a private vehicle for taxation purposes. The first thing Joe average is going to do is try and bypass it so you are going to have to have monitoring and penalties. All of this complicated by the certainty that all vehicles are different. There are so many reasons why it's a nightmare.
GPS watches with RF uploads are the size of 2 50c coins (and half of that is battery) and under $200. You can rivet that onto numberplate easy and signal would be fine.
Tamper evident is pretty easily done by a high-tech computer device, and it would be a criminal offence to tamper with the government property device. Open it and it's going to know and pop it's tamper fuse which will show in its signing codes during uploads.
Like I said Australia will not be the leader, just a follower of the tech when it is an established mass produced device costing $50.
A country which has already given up road privacy and accepted things like Congestion Charge and trackers in trucks will do it first and get the bugs out of the system, produce the devices in the tens of millions, then others will follow.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby BJL » Tue Jun 05, 2018 4:59 pm
Also bear in mind that GPS is not always accurate. It hasn't been unknown for a cyclist to ride 1000's of kilometres over vast tracts of ocean in a single ride because of one or two dodgy readings. These occasional bugs are going to have to be sorted out without having to go to court and try to prove to a magistrate that you didn't drive 500km out to sea and back. Because I'm sure the dimwitted bureaucrats will just look at it and say 'The GPS said it happened so it must have, NEXT'
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Jmuzz » Tue Jun 05, 2018 5:00 pm
Every car would be required to provide a monthly billing upload (that's assuming a system which isn't a live networked privacy spy).AdelaidePeter wrote:
I was thinking enforcement. How do you ensure every car has a GPS, and stop people from removing or disabling it? That's why I was imagining that every road would need a detector, to detect vehicles without a sensor.
Numberplate readers in safety cams and police cars would be feeding the database with when and where every car is seen (happening right now, not future).
Based on that database alone the system knows a minimum travel distance and premium location/time tolling that the car is expected to meet.
Eg when ABC-123 reports it only did 200km, but has been seen in Newcastle-Canberra-Newcastle then that's instantly busted as a defrauded device.
There are other easy techy solutions too. Eg 50m range radio (standard wifi chip) which can handshake with any camera pole or police car it gets close to.
"ABC-123 I have visual on you, provide handshake response to code 5353739253", no/invalid reply or tamper indicated and the cops machine starts beeping and telling him to pull over ABC-123.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Jmuzz » Tue Jun 05, 2018 5:12 pm
That's just lazy processing, eg Strava refusing to filter out obvious 5000w KOMs in cars and 800kmph planes which intersect segments..BJL wrote: Also bear in mind that GPS is not always accurate. It hasn't been unknown for a cyclist to ride 1000's of kilometres over vast tracts of ocean in a single ride because of one or two dodgy readings.'
It's easy to filter when someone bothers to apply basic logic.
Newer stuff is using accelerometers to verify movement and keep track in tunnels too, so it's a decreasing issue.
Ideally a system would preserve privacy by only uploading the billing summary to govt. With actual logs available to the owner to review, if they challenge the billing then they are going to have to share the full logs (which would be signed with encryption keys to gaurantee no tampering) or at least snippets so the filtering can be fixed and billing recalculated.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Comedian » Tue Jun 05, 2018 5:41 pm
That bit in red there is the magic bit that I think you might find could be quite tricky... It won't be pretty easy. You'll have to immobilise the car if it isn't operational. What if it can't get signal? What are you going to do in tunnels or areas of poor GPS? How's it going to phone back the charges? How's it going to know if the immobiliser has been bypassed? How are you going to agree on a standard that all vehicles have these devices fitted and must be built and compliant despite their differences? What are you going to do if a manufacturer says "we aren't prepared to make changes to a vehicle sold world wide for this market"? How are you going to get all states and territories to agree? What will happen to existing LEV's? Will they just be exempt..Jmuzz wrote:It's pretty simple, just a box on the dash or even externally on the numberplate, even simpler if it has an external GPS antenna which can poke out from under bonnet, getting thin 12v wire to it is really no drama.Comedian wrote:
Any type of GPS logger is likely to be quite difficult. It's one thing when a fleet is owned by a business and they choose to install something. It's another thing when the government mandates the installation of something into a private vehicle for taxation purposes. The first thing Joe average is going to do is try and bypass it so you are going to have to have monitoring and penalties. All of this complicated by the certainty that all vehicles are different. There are so many reasons why it's a nightmare.
GPS watches with RF uploads are the size of 2 50c coins (and half of that is battery) and under $200. You can rivet that onto numberplate easy and signal would be fine.
Tamper evident is pretty easily done by a high-tech computer device, and it would be a criminal offence to tamper with the government property device. Open it and it's going to know and pop it's tamper fuse which will show in its signing codes during uploads.
Like I said Australia will not be the leader, just a follower of the tech when it is an established mass produced device costing $50.
A country which has already given up road privacy and accepted things like Congestion Charge and trackers in trucks will do it first and get the bugs out of the system, produce the devices in the tens of millions, then others will follow.
While I agree a "high tech computer device" to do all this isn't too hard to do I'm pretty sure all the little details will see this stuff being a long way off. All through computer history tricky people have found a way to bypass virtually anything - and when there is big money involved people will give it a red hot go.
Like I said I reckon it's going to be a lot easier for them to charge significant roads or by taxing areas with technologies they have now..
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Re: User pay per km
Postby find_bruce » Tue Jun 05, 2018 5:45 pm
That's a whole lot of handwaving - you don't need to tamper with the device, just block the GPS antenna - faraday had that sorted in 1835 & yes they have been used successfully to block tracking in fleet vehiclesJmuzz wrote:Tamper evident is pretty easily done by a high-tech computer device, and it would be a criminal offence to tamper with the government property device. Open it and it's going to know and pop it's tamper fuse which will show in its signing codes during uploads.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Thoglette » Tue Jun 05, 2018 6:18 pm
All been solved.Comedian wrote:What if ..
What if you loose your opal/smartrider/e-tag/whatever? What if it stops working? What if you'd rather have a paper ticket ? etc etc
Same questions, same answers, same admin and burdens of proof. And brought in with the carrot and stick. It'll start as a discount on your rego or insurance or tolls...and end up that you'll need "club" rego to run an MV without it.
As the OP noted, the problems are political, not technical.
Which'll all change if the tollway companies put two-and-two together. After all, every road is now a toll-road!
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Jmuzz » Tue Jun 05, 2018 6:45 pm
There is no need to immobilize, it would just show a discrepancy vs any checkpoint cameras and it will show in any police car handshake system.Comedian wrote: That bit in red there is the magic bit that I think you might find could be quite tricky... It won't be pretty easy. You'll have to immobilise the car if it isn't operational. What if it can't get signal..
Good luck when police impound the box on the spot and send it for review.
Who is bypassing Samsung Knox? Is the FBI able to crack iPhone encryption yet?All through computer history tricky people have found a way to bypass virtually anything
Nobody is probing these modern chips, too small, designed for security. Not like old 8 bit AVR microprocessors you can send to Russia for reading.
Add accelerometer movement tracking. Not going to fool that with an antenna shield or jammer, less accurate but it still knows and may record more distance rather than less.
Especially when the upload data reports the percentage of time with movement and a blocked GPS and that gets flagged as abnormal and sent for repair/inspection.
Add inter box location sharing over local radio (wifi) and even with a blocked GPS it knows where it is within 50m if another unblocked car is around.
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Re: User pay per km
Postby uart » Tue Jun 05, 2018 8:42 pm
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Re: User pay per km
Postby Jmuzz » Tue Jun 05, 2018 9:05 pm
It has already happened, London is basically a tollroad, regions of China are tolls every road/district.
The system will expand in those places, trackers offer a lot more capability than cameras (especially when fake plates become an issue). So a tracker system wins as the best system for government, therefore it will happen.
Others will follow copying the existing mass produced system. Phones with GPS and radio and accelerometers are $30, how much do you reckon a box with just those features will cost when production runs are in the tens of millions?
The device can maintain privacy, it can have map and rates inside and just spit out the bill signed with key.
Of course privacy loss would creep in, and in China's case privacy would never exist at all.
But that privacy is already gone, every safety cam, speed camera, highway patrol is already logging plates. Not long until that is every police car and every traffic watch camera.
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