APRIL 25 — The traffic woes that we all have to go through in Kuala Lumpur are clearly a result of poor public transport. An article dated April 23, written by Dr Sabariah Jemali entitled “The Rail Truth”, provides some insight on our current plight where according to her only 17 per cent or 1.24 million trips a day are taken on public transport whereas around six million trips a day are done on private transport.
Of the 1.24 million trips a day done on public transport, 600,000 are done on buses (made by 1,050 buses), 400,000 by LRT, 100,000 by KTM, 40,000 by monorail, 20,000 by ERL and 80,000 by taxis. I am not an expert but I find the figures provided in Sabariah’s article to be plausible and reasonable.
However, I find it difficult to support the MRT project for Kuala Lumpur which is going to cost north of RM 40 billion and will likely only be completed near the end of this decade.
If we really wanted 50 per cent of our commuters to take public transport, we need to provide the facilities for another 2,500,000 trips a day. I believe we can do it simply by tweaking our existing infrastructure.
Foremost, we must accept that public transport has to be a government monopoly where the costs have to be borne by the government for the good of society.
In the case of the Klang Valley we already have Prasarana, wholly owned by the Ministry of Finance, which is already doing the major part of the public transport.
They should be tasked with planning, operating, integrating and expanding their existing network of rail and buses. We also have the Land Public Transport Commission that was enacted by statute last year to oversee public transport operations which, in the case of the Klang Valley, would mean it has oversight over Prasarana.
Thus if we accept that Prasarana is going to have the monopoly, what does it need to do? The most important element in public transport is the buses as they can link the movement of commuters from their homes or offices to the entire public transport network.
One-thousand-and-fifty buses are not enough; we need something like 5,000 buses which are new, air conditioned, secured with lots of cameras, comfortable and preferably eco-friendly.
The buses will need to have their own bus lanes so that they can run unimpeded and be on time at their stops. Prasarana could ask that one lane in every three-lane road be allocated solely for its buses. Its buses should arrive at their stop every few minutes during peak period.
It could further plan where it stops to maximise its efficiency and interconnectivity. If you are in the “Golden Triangle”, the heart of Kuala Lumpur, you can see bus stops outside many buildings that are hardly 100 metres apart.
It is hardly reasonable for a bus on its route to stop every 100 metres! Bus stops should probably be about 500 metres apart in populated areas so that the commuter only has to walk around 250 metres at most.
Another problem is, of course, frequency and capacity of the existing public transport. Take the monorail as an example: it carries only around 100 passengers at a time and even during peak hours only comes about once every five minutes.
I understand that there were some original design flaws but they can be rectified and the monorail should be able to handle greater volume and frequencies. Double the carriages and make the intervals one minute apart and you will be carrying 10 times the passenger load that you are now.
Public transport is about moving as many people as possible in the shortest period of time. It is not a money-making proposition but it is a social good. Therefore why should we charge for it? Make it free, clean, comfortable, secure and efficient within the urban areas and ridership will increase substantially and traffic jams will be much reduced.
But how much will it cost? Let’s take SBS Transit in Singapore as an example which has a ridership of around 2.8 million per day (2.4 million bus riders a day as well 400,000 a day on rail). Its total revenue for 2010 was S$720 million (approximately RM1.76 billion) and it made a profit after tax of S$54 million.
In ringgit terms, their average revenue is around RM1.75 per rider per day and as they are profitable, we can conclude that the cost for Kuala Lumpur should not be more than RM1.75 per rider per day.
If we were to cater for around 3,500,000 trips per day to meet our goal of 50 per cent of the people using public transport then the cost would be RM6,125,000 per day or around RM2.25 billion a year.
It may sound like a lot of money but bear in mind the government is budgeting to spend RM14 billion on oil subsidies alone for 2011. Also bear in mind that RM2.25 billion won’t even cover the yearly interest cost of the RM40 billion MRT which will also not be able to solve our public transport woes in the Klang Valley anyway.
We need to think outside the box. Give a great public transport system for free within the urban areas and you don’t have to subsidise the fuel price. You don’t have to build an MRT system for RM40 billion. You don’t have to burden any income group in the city. Transport costs are zero if they take public transport.
Of course if those who are better off still want to drive into work they could cross subsidise our free urban public transport if we charge them a congestion fee to enter the city.
It is time to use our wits and not only our wallet. We will get as much publicity worldwide from our free public transport as we would from building a 100-storey building. What’s more, our own city folks will greatly appreciate it. You can’t beat free.
* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.








