The context

Traf­fic is incre­asing. Accor­din­gly, the exis­ting capa­ci­ties of the trans­port infra­struc­tures will not always and ever­y­whe­re be suf­fi­ci­ent to satis­fy the demand for trans­port. The fede­ral govern­ment, can­tons, muni­ci­pa­li­ties and trans­port com­pa­nies are imple­men­ting a wide range of mea­su­res to ensu­re that mobi­li­ty remains pos­si­ble in the future (e.g. traf­fic manage­ment, expan­si­on). Nevert­hel­ess, many of these mea­su­res have rea­ched their limits.

One mea­su­re to reme­dy traf­fic con­ges­ti­on has so far remain­ed lar­ge­ly unu­sed in Switz­er­land: dif­fe­ren­tia­ted pri­cing sys­tems, for exam­p­le in the form of mobi­li­ty char­ges that vary in time or place. This would be tan­ta­mount to tur­ning away from uni­form or flat-rate fares. So-cal­led mobi­li­ty pri­cing influen­ces trans­port demand and mobi­li­ty beha­viour and thus ulti­m­ate­ly enables tar­ge­ted manage­ment of exis­ting trans­port capacities.

The legal basis

With the draft «Fede­ral Act on Pilot Pro­jects on Mobi­li­ty Pri­cing» of 3 Febru­ary 2021, the Fede­ral Depart­ment of the Envi­ron­ment, Trans­port, Ener­gy and Com­mu­ni­ca­ti­ons (DETEC) wants to crea­te a legal basis so that can­tons, cities or muni­ci­pa­li­ties can carry out local and time-limi­t­ed pilot pro­jects on mobi­li­ty pri­cing with com­pul­so­ry char­ges. Such pro­jects should pro­vi­de fin­dings on new forms of pri­cing to spe­ci­fi­cal­ly influence trans­port demand and mobi­li­ty beha­viour in moto­ri­sed pri­va­te trans­port and public transport.

State­ment of the VAP

The VAP sup­ports the basic prin­ci­ples for­mu­la­ted in the fede­ral government’s con­cep­tu­al work, in par­ti­cu­lar the prin­ci­ple of «pay as you use» with full com­pen­sa­ti­on. Accor­din­gly, trans­port users should not pay more, but pay dif­fer­ent­ly. We also sup­port the approa­ches of inter­mo­da­li­ty and dis­tri­bu­ti­on effects, accor­ding to which road and rail are fully included and accor­ding to the same cri­te­ria, but mobi­li­ty remains afforda­ble; all this within the frame­work of a gra­dua­ted, trans­pa­rent and com­pre­hen­si­ble struc­tu­re of the elements.

Howe­ver, the VAP rejects capa­ci­ty manage­ment on exis­ting infra­struc­tures wit­hout full com­pen­sa­ti­on. Like­wi­se, mobi­li­ty pri­cing must not be used to avoid traf­fic or to steer the modal split, as the con­sti­tu­ti­on offers no room for this.

Modal shift suc­ceeds if there are cor­re­spon­din­gly favoura­ble offers and incen­ti­ves. Mul­ti­mo­dal logi­stics solu­ti­ons in par­ti­cu­lar hold con­sidera­ble poten­ti­al for this. The­r­e­fo­re, modal shift can be achie­ved with impro­ved frame­work con­di­ti­ons and infra­struc­tu­re capa­ci­ties for mul­ti­mo­dal logi­stics solu­ti­ons. In addi­ti­on to pure rail freight trans­port, spe­cial atten­ti­on should be paid to mul­ti­mo­dal logi­stics solu­ti­ons Rhine-rail, Rhine-road, road-rail, pipe­line-rail, pipe­line-road and cor­re­spon­ding solu­ti­ons in the area of city logi­stics. Here, gene­rous reim­bur­se­ments of mobi­li­ty char­ges for addi­tio­nal trans­ship­ments of goods and con­tai­ners bet­ween modes of trans­port can help to avoid exter­nal effects and redu­ce envi­ron­men­tal pollution.

Within the frame­work of the Cargo Forum Switz­er­land, we addres­sed our state­ment on the «Fede­ral Law on Pilot Pro­jects on Mobi­li­ty Pri­cing» (in ger­man) to Fede­ral Coun­cil­lor Simo­net­ta Som­ma­ru­ga on 17 May 2021.

Draft law has methodological shortcomings

DETEC’s draft hard­ly spe­ci­fies the expe­ri­men­tal arran­ge­ments and the hypo­the­ses to be tes­ted in detail. The influence of the Con­fe­de­ra­ti­on in pilot pro­jects with com­pul­so­ry levies is limi­t­ed to the exami­na­ti­on and appr­oval of the pro­jects. In this respect, its influence is very limi­t­ed with regard to a broad-based gain in know­ledge accor­ding to Art. 17 of the draft. Not even the com­pa­ra­bi­li­ty of seve­ral pilot pro­jects with each other is assu­med. Thus, no cor­rob­ora­ted fin­dings from dif­fe­rent regi­ons on indi­vi­du­al the­ses can be expec­ted. In the case of pilot pro­jects with vol­un­t­a­ry par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on, imple­men­ta­ti­on even seems pos­si­ble wit­hout an exami­na­ti­on accor­ding to Art. 26, pro­vi­ded that fede­ral con­tri­bu­ti­ons are wai­ved. These short­co­mings need to be rectified.

The law distin­gu­is­hes bet­ween pilot pro­jects in the area of moto­ri­sed indi­vi­du­al trans­port and those in public trans­port (Art. 3, Art. 6 and Art. 9). This distinc­tion is incom­pa­ti­ble with the basic prin­ci­ples of Mobi­li­ty Pri­cing. Pilot pro­jects are to be arran­ged in such a way that pri­va­te trans­port and public trans­port can be tes­ted out, as it were.

The law con­cei­ves the vol­un­t­a­ry or obli­ga­to­ry Mobi­li­ty Pri­cing levy in addi­ti­on to the levies curr­ent­ly in force (cf. Art. 11 Pro­hi­bi­ti­on of tariff reduc­tions). This con­tra­dicts the requi­re­ment of compensation.

In Art. 12, the law only pro­vi­des for an anony­mous levy for pilot pro­jects in the area of public trans­port. This requi­re­ment must also apply to moto­ri­sed pri­va­te transport.

Heavy goods traf­fic on rail and road over 3.5 t total weight is not the sub­ject of the pilot pro­jects. Accor­din­gly, those respon­si­ble for the freight trans­port pro­jects can only gather very limi­t­ed experience.

Overall concept with performance-based pricing called for

We are aware that the exis­ting finan­cing mecha­nisms do not allow for per­for­mance-based pri­cing of mobi­li­ty. As a result, the true costs and the degree of self-finan­cing vary great­ly bet­ween the dif­fe­rent modes of trans­port and bet­ween heavy goods and pas­sen­ger trans­port, and they con­tain false incen­ti­ves for mobi­li­ty and spa­ti­al deve­lo­p­ment in Switzerland.

The VAP the­r­e­fo­re recom­mends an over­all con­cept for the future design of mobi­li­ty levies. In doing so, the mea­su­res for indi­vi­du­al sub-goals should be revi­sed while avo­i­ding con­flicts of goals and taking into account all tech­ni­cal developments.

As the voice of the ship­ping indus­try, we adhe­re to the fol­lo­wing premises:

  • Logi­stics and freight trans­port – espe­ci­al­ly road freight trans­port – are essen­ti­al ele­ments of a suc­cessful inter­na­tio­nal­ly net­work­ed busi­ness loca­ti­on in Switz­er­land and the sup­p­ly of Switz­er­land. Sett­le­ment, trans­port and infra­struc­tu­re poli­cy must con­ti­nue to gua­ran­tee these.
  • (Freight) traf­fic is hand­led in a way that is as needs-ori­en­ted as pos­si­ble and as envi­ron­men­tal­ly fri­end­ly and resour­ce-saving as possible.
  • Frame­work con­di­ti­ons and infra­struc­tu­re deve­lo­p­ment con­tri­bu­te to the achie­ve­ment of the first two pre­mi­ses with incen­ti­ves, suf­fi­ci­ent infra­struc­tu­re capa­ci­ties and the pro­mo­ti­on of innovations.
  • Infra­struc­tu­re and trans­port costs are sub­ject to the pol­lu­ter pays prin­ci­ple. Ide­al­ly, all trans­port users in pas­sen­ger and freight trans­port cover their ope­ra­ting and infra­struc­tu­re costs as well as extern­al­ly cau­sed costs (balan­ce principle).

 

DETEC con­sul­ta­ti­on draft and expl­ana­to­ry report (in ger­man): https://www.astra.admin.ch/astra/de/home/themen/mobility-pricing/vernehmlassungsunterlagen.html

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