CILT report shows potential for patronage increase

Potential factors for increasing patronage on bus services have been highlighted in a paper released by the the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport’s (CILT) Bus & Coach Policy Group.

The paper draws on evidence regarding overall demand factors and seeks to show how bus patronage has declined and how demand can be brought back.

Bus ridership in Great Britain has declined in passenger terms over recent years. Between 2004/05 and 2018/19 there were significant passenger number reductions of more than 20% in Wales, Scotland and England’s metropolitan areas, while in London and in the English counties’ passenger numbers had increased.

However, variations exist, with southern England cities such as Brighton, Bournemouth and Bristol, and in Scotland, Edinburgh, seeing growth in bus use. In Wales, the TrawsCymru interurban bus network bucked the overall trend with an increase in its passengers from 0.473 million (2007/8) to 2.033 million (2018/19).

Bus demand in Britain has been strongly affected by the pandemic. Service levels are now restored to their March 2020 levels on most routes with government support plugging the financial gap.

In the CILT paper, a wide range of published research on bus demand is reviewed, including sensitivity to fares and service levels, along with other factors.

Simpler fares structures may help to attract passengers such as zonal prices or a multi-ride/multi-operator ticket or contactless bank cards, according to the research. These bring lower operating costs through shorter dwell times at stops.

Competition from the car, cycling and walking is critical, it reports, especially in terms of overall journey time, particularly where bus priority is limited.

Recent surveys have examined the factors that will attract passengers to buses: some of these factors also appear in the Bus Strategy for England.

These include:

  • Improved punctuality and reliability
  • Frequent services
  • The journey experience linking the bus environment, clean vehicles, driver attitude, on board information
  • One ticket for all bus, train and tram operators (as London Oyster, Netherlands Chipkaart, concessionary bus pass)
  • Integrated timetables particularly where frequencies are low
  • More frequent evening and weekend services

The paper is co-authored by Professor Stuart Cole CBE, Emeritus Professor of Transport (Economics and Policy), University of South Wales, and Peter White, Emeritus Professor of Public Transport Systems, University of Westminster.

  • The full report is available here.

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