In the battle against the car, space-starved Singapore has deployed road tolls, massive spending on public transport and a license fee that bumps the cost of an average vehicle to over US$80,000.
But urban planners looking for solutions to gridlock may find the draconian measures hard to replicate in other less-compliant cities.
Singapore has gone further than any other major city to avoid the monster jams that have blighted Asian metropolises such as Jakarta or Manila.
Photo: AFP
The tough approach has been possible as Singaporeans are used to strict control — with media closely monitored and harsh punishments for minor crimes — and are fearful the city-state will be flooded with vehicles without the curbs.
However the model faces mounting criticism thanks to rush-hour jams that have frustrated commuters, surging vehicle prices after a freeze on car numbers and public transport breakdowns.
“I think the system can be made better and fairer,” Joel Lee, a 28-year-old technician, said.
He said authorities should make “a distinction between those who need cars, be it for work or family commitments, and those who just want more cars as a status symbol.”
PRICEY CERTIFICATE
Authorities’ main tool is the Certificate of Entitlement (COE). Every potential car buyer must bid for a certificate and the cost is added to the vehicle price.
The current cost of a COE for an average family car is almost US$37,000, pushing the price of a Toyota Corolla to US$83,000.
But COEs fluctuate depending on demand and at their high point four years ago the same car was US$127,000 — six times the price in the US.
The certificates are valid for 10 years, after which the car must be scrapped or the certificate renewed. Despite the high price, many in the financial center, home to hordes of wealthy expats and millionaires, have bought cars, with some 600,000 on the streets — a considerable number for a limited road network.
Other key measures include controlling the number of vehicles on the road and charging tolls on main roads at busy times.
Authorities last month decided to freeze the number of private cars on the road from February for at least two years, citing land scarcity.
But the decision sparked anger and was followed by a jump in the price of COEs by several thousand US dollars, in what the Straits Times newspaper described as “panic buying.”
To mitigate its tough policies, Singapore has built a modern public transport network with a subway, overland trains and buses — the government recently announced a plan to spend US$20.6 billion to upgrade the system.
Ride-hailing apps Grab and Uber have helped those unable or unwilling to spend on a car, and the government plans to build 700km of cycle paths.
But the subway has recently been hit by repeated delays and breakdowns during rush hour. In the most serious incident for years a tunnel on the network flooded last month, crippling a main line for 20 hours, and sparking widespread anger.
IS ‘CAR-LITE’ RIGHT?
Some are now questioning the government’s plan to make Singapore a country where most people walk, cycle or take public transport.
“The government has been trying to make the city ‘car-lite’ but you have a train system that’s not very reliable,” Jason Lin, a 66-year-old retiree, said.
“If you take a bus, because there are so many cars, it’ll take a long time. It can be very frustrating.”
Speaking in parliament this month, Lam Pin Min (藍彬明), a senior minister of state for transport, insisted that significant growth in the transport network was planned and there would be “less need to own a car.”
Singapore has not heavily promoted electric cars as it pushes public transport — unlike rival financial hub Hong Kong — but an electric-car sharing scheme starting next month is a first step to changing that.
Other places echo Singapore’s approach — London has a congestion charge while Paris sometimes orders some private cars off the road due to air pollution — but they are unlikely to copy the city-state’s tougher measures as it would be too risky.
“COE is not a very popular measure, and any government that tries to implement this kind of a measure in any other country may lose elections,” Vivek Vaidya, a transport expert at business consultancy Frost and Sullivan, said.
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