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Road space rationing

Road space rationing, also known as alternate-day travel, driving restriction and no-drive days (Spanish: restricción vehicular; Portuguese: rodízio veicular; French: circulation alternée), is a travel demand management strategy aimed to reduce the negative externalities generated by urban air pollution or peak urban travel demand in excess of available supply or road capacity, through artificially restricting demand (vehicle travel) by rationing the scarce common good road capacity, especially during the peak periods or during peak pollution events. This objective is achieved by restricting traffic access into an urban cordon area, city center (CBD), or district based upon the last digits of the license number on pre-established days and during certain periods, usually, the peak hours.

Road space requirements for 30 people in 20 cars (left) compared to 30 people on bicycles (middle) and 30 people in a single bus (right)
Traffic congestion persists despite São Paulo's municipal no-drive days based on license numbers, implemented since 1997. São Paulo downtown, Brazil.

The practical implementation of this traffic restraint policy is common in Latin America, and in many cases, the road rationing has as a main goal the reduction of air pollution, such as the cases of México City, and Santiago, Chile. São Paulo, with a fleet of 6 million vehicles in 2007, is the largest metropolis in the world with such a travel restriction, implemented first in 1996 as measured to mitigate air pollution, and thereafter made permanent in 1997 to relieve traffic congestion. More recent implementations in Costa Rica and Honduras have had the objective of reducing oil consumption, due to the high impact this import has on the economy of small countries, and considering the steep increases in oil prices that began in 2003. Bogotá, Quito, and La Paz, Bolivia also have similar driving restriction schemes in place.

After a temporary implementation of road space rationing to reduce air pollution in Beijing during the 2008 Summer Olympics, local officials put in place several permanent rationing schemes to improve the city's air quality. As of June 2016, another 11 Chinese cities have similar restriction schemes in place. Also, temporary driving restrictions to reduce cars on the streets by half during severe pollution events have been implemented in Paris and surrounding suburbs in March 2014, March 2015, and December 2016; in Beijing twice in December 2015, and one more time in December 2016; and also in Rome and Milan for several days in December 2015. A similar alternate-day travel temporary scheme was implemented in New Delhi as a two-week trial in January 2016. A temporary ban on diesel cars was implemented in Oslo on municipal roads in January 2017.

Historical background edit

The earliest known implementation of road space rationing took place in Ancient Rome, as carriages and carts pulled by horses created serious congestion problems in several Roman cities. In 45 B.C. Julius Caesar declared the center of Rome off-limits between 6 a.m. and 4 p.m. to all vehicles except for carriages transporting priests, officials, visitors, and high-ranking citizens.[1]

Effectiveness edit

 
Road Space Rationing impacts behavioral changes and may lead to the ultimate outcome, i.e. end traffic congestion. Other factors impacting these changes make it hard to isolate the singular effects of Road Space Rationing regulations.

Schemes rationing access based on number plate have mixed results. If used infrequently or temporarily the alternate-day travel policy can have some impact. However, if used as a long term measure, inequality issues might arise, as wealthier people can afford to own two cars with opposite-parity number plates, to circumvent any restrictions, with the second vehicle being often older and therefore more polluting.[2] Cities such as Tehran which have used such schemes are now looking to more sustainable methods of traffic and emissions control,[3] such as low emission zone or traffic limited zones as used in Europe.[4] Access regulations have often been found to be effective, in reducing congestion, traffic and pollution.[5]

The program's impact on moving behavior to more sustainable transport methods is also unclear. Evaluations on the effectiveness of road space rationing regulations focus mainly on whether there is a decrease in the usage of the less sustainable vehicles for which the schemes were implemented in the first place. They do not focus on whether there is a change in the pattern in which such vehicles are used. For example, evaluations examine how many people stop using a polluting car. They do not evaluate how many people start riding bicycles or carpool as a result of such schemes.[6]

Evaluating effectiveness edit

It is important to better understand the effectiveness of the regulatory policies intended to reduce traffic congestion to improve their implementation in the future. Some factors that hinder the effective program evaluation of policies like road space rationing are that transportation demand management strategies are often implemented as a part of other broader policies. It is difficult to separate the effects of such methods from the other methods they are associated with. Most measures are taken at the beginning and during the implementation of a strategy. Not enough evaluation is conducted after strategy implementation. In developing countries, data insufficiency hinders the formation of generalizable conclusions on the effectiveness of a strategy.[6] It is hard to outline a cause and effect relationship between the regulation that is implemented and the change in behavior it creates or general effect it has. Many factors could cause a change in the behavior of individuals affected by the regulation at hand. It could be the direct result of that regulation or the result of other existing regulations, and societal effects.[6] Given that such programs are not usually implemented in isolation, singular conclusions on the effectiveness of regulations impacting traffic congestion are difficult to form.

Three methods can be employed to measure the effectiveness of regulatory policies. The first measure, administration evaluation, examines how road space rationing is delivered and enforced to the target audience. The second measure, behavioral evaluation, focuses on the extent to which the regulation changes the behavior of the target audience. The third measure, outcome performance, analyzes the outcomes of the regulation. To collect information on these measures, direct observation, stated preferences surveys, and revealed preference surveys can be conducted. These methods can be conducted in isolation or simultaneously to procure rich data. The problems associated with these methods are observer bias in direct observation, the spread of misinformation when respondents are untruthful, and excess time consumption.[6]

Applications of road space rationing edit

Permanent alternate-day travel schemes edit

Road space rationing based on license numbers has been implemented in cities such as Athens (1982),[7] Santiago, Chile (1986 and extended 2001), México City (1989), Metro Manila (1995), São Paulo (1997), Bogotá, Colombia (1998), La Paz, Bolivia (2003),[8] San José, Costa Rica, (2005)[9][10] countrywide in Honduras (2008),[11] and Quito, Ecuador (2010).[12] All these cities restrain a percentage of vehicles every weekday during rush hours or for the entire day. When the restriction is based in two digits a theoretical 20% reduction of traffic is expected. Cities with serious air quality problems, such as México City and Santiago use more digits to achieve greater reductions in air pollution, and even the prohibition can be for more than one day a week. In Bogotá, Colombia from 2009 the plate restriction was extended from peak periods to the whole day (from 06:00 to 20:00 hours) in the whole city.[citation needed]

Bertrand Delanoë, the mayor of Paris, proposed to impose a complete ban on motor vehicles in the city's inner districts, with exemptions only for residents, businesses, and the disabled, as a three-part plan to implement during a seven-year period.[13] This proposal was made in 2005, in the context of Paris' bid to host the 2012 Summer Olympics[14] which ended up being won by London.

During the discussions regarding the proposal to introduce congestion pricing in New York, the commission created in 2007 by the New York State Legislature to evaluate other traffic relief options, considered road space rationing based on license plates as an alternative to congestion pricing.[15] The proposal stalled in April 2008 as the legislature decided not to vote the proposed plan.[16]

Athens edit

Rising traffic in Athens during the 1990s led to the development of the Dactylius (Greek: Δακτύλιος, romanizedDaktýlios, lit.'ring') around central Athens. The Dactylius does not require drivers to pay in order to enter the areas subjected to the Dactylius' restrictions. Instead, the scheme depends on the parity of the date and of the vehicle's registration plate, the vehicle type as well as the time of the week/month. There are three Dactylius areas: The Inner, the Outer and the Green, each one with its own policies.[citation needed]

Bogotá edit

Then mayor Enrique Peñalosa, introduced in Bogotá, Colombia in 1998 a driving restriction program, "Pico y placa" (literally in Spanish: "peak and license plate") to reduce traffic congestion during rush hours.[17] The system restricts traffic access into a pre-established urban area for vehicles with license plate numbers ending in certain digits on pre-established days and during certain hours based on the last digit of the licence plate numbers. Initially the system restricted traffic between 7:00 and 9:00 a.m. and between 5:30 and 7:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, for two days for each registered vehicle.[17][18]

Then mayor Antanas Mockus extended the restriction for one hour in 2001. A complementary program called "El Pico y Placa Ambiental" (literally in Spanish: "environmental peak and license plate") was implemented by then mayor Luis Eduardo Garzón in 2006, expanding the restriction to public transportation vehicles, including both bus and taxi services.[18] Four numbers were restricted every day for private use vehicles, and two for public transportation vehicles. Since 2002 Bogotá's scheme switched the combinations of days and numbers every year, making it harder to circumvent the restriction by buying another car.[19]

Starting in February 2009, then mayor Samuel Moreno Rojas extended the restriction from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., Monday through Friday. This extension was issued as a temporary measure until public works related with the Transmilenio BRT were completed.[20] In July 2012, then mayor Gustavo Petro reduced the hours of the restriction from 14 to 7 hours per day, to restrict access only between 6:00 and 8:30 a.m. and between 3:00 and 7:30 p.m. In addition, five neighborhoods were released from the restriction, Usme, Rafael Uribe Uribe, Tunjuelito, San Cristóbal and Ciudad Bolívar. Also, under the modified scheme five ending numbers are restricted every day between Monday and Friday, license plated ending on odd-numbers are restricted on odd-days of the month, and even-numbers on even-days.[18][21]

Since December 2014, exempted vehicles include passenger cars with three or more passengers including the driver; properly registered vehicles for use by people with disabilities; all-electric vehicles; emergency vehicles, such police cars, ambulances, and fire trucks; properly identified public utilities vehicles, traffic control and towing vehicles; school buses; motorcycles; cash-in-transit armored vehicles; funeral vehicles; and press, judiciary, diplomatic, presidential motorcade, and security escort vehicles.[22]

Similar schemes with the same name have been implemented in several Colombian cities, including Armenia, Barranquilla, Bucaramanga, Cali, Cartagena, Manizales, Medellín, and Pereira.[citation needed]

Jakarta edit

The no-drive day in Jakarta is known as Ganjil Genap (even and odd [days] in Indonesian). This policy imitates what has been done in Beijing during the Olympics. Policeman checks license plate's last digit on the entrance of avenue or expressway. A car with even license plate (for example B 1000 LA, obsolete plate of Idris Sardi car) is allowed to pass in "even days", but will be fined when they pass that road in "odd days". Drivers might get even/odd days information from social media to radio stations. The Ganjil Genap first time implemented in Sudirman Avenue on 27 July 2016.[23] Ganjil Genap was implemented due to "3-in-1 policy" termination started from 16 May 2016 by former Jakarta Governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama (or Ahok).[24] 3-in-1 policy banned vehicles containing less than 3 passengers. 3-in-1 existed for 12 years and a half (23 December 2003 – 16 May 2016), but abandoned by Basuki due to a trick known as joki 3 in 1. He said that joki 3 in 1 practice often exploited kids, just to fill the car to 3 people when passing checkpoints.[25] Police authorities also admitted that control of 3-in-1 was harder than license plate checking, due to joki 3-in-1 hack. In 2018, license plate checking also applied on expressways bound to Jakarta suburban area (Jabodetabek). License plates are checked in toll booths Bekasi, Cibubur (border of Jakarta and Depok) and Tangerang. Only overcrowded toll booths apply this ban. Existing Ganjil Genap in Jakarta was extended from 6 am starts from 23 April 2018.

Mexico City edit

Mexico City started in November 1989 its driving restriction program, "Hoy no Circula" (literally in Spanish: "today [your car] does not circulate", known as "No-drive days"), which consisted of prohibiting the circulation of 20% of vehicles from Monday to Friday depending on the last digit of their license plates. Record levels of ozone and other airborne pollutants led the city government to implement the scheme.[19][26] The program was planned to apply only during the winter, when air pollution is at its worst. Winter follows the rainy season when thermal inversion, an atmospheric condition which traps smog and pollution close to the ground, increases air pollution noticeably. However, the program was made permanent at the end of the 1990 winter season.[citation needed]

 
Severe smog over Mexico City.

The program is intended to improve the air quality of Mexico City. The restriction is based on the last digit of the license plate. Two numbers are restricted to travel every day from 5 a.m. to 10 p.m. The restrictions apply to the entire Mexico City metropolitan area, therefore, a similar coordinated program operates within the State of México, including the 18 neighboring municipalities which surrounds Mexico City on three sides: Atizapán de Zaragoza, Coacalco de Berriozabal, Cuautitlán, Cuautitlán Izcalli, Chalco, Chimalhuacan, Chicoloapan, Ecatepec de Morelos, Huixquilucan, Ixtapaluca, La Paz, Naucalpan de Juárez, Nezahualcóyotl, Nicolás Romero, Tecámac, Tlalnepantla de Baz, Tultitlán and Valle de Chalco Solidaridad.[26][27]

Hoy No Circula is coupled with an exhaust monitoring program, known as "Verificación" in Spanish (verification), whereby a car's pollutant emissions are analyzed every six months. A colored sticker based on a vehicle's license plate number is affixed to each vehicle following an emissions test, indicating whether a vehicle is exempt from the program or not. Hybrid electric vehicles and electric vehicles are exempted. There are other restrictions that are applicable to non-local vehicles and foreigners.[28][29] In June 2015, the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation ruled in favor a constitutional challenge, and ordered that passenger cars with model year older than 2007 shall be restricted based on their actual tailpipe emissions, and not on how old the car is.[30]

Taxis, buses, police cars, ambulances, fire trucks, commercial vehicles operating with liquid propane gas, and commercial vehicles transporting perishable goods are exempt. In 2008 the scheme in Mexico City was extended to limit driving into the city one Saturday every month, but only applies to cars that are more than 10-years old (sticker 2). Foreign-plated vehicles without emissions stickers are restricted all day every Saturday.[31] Similar alternate-day travel restriction programs have been implemented in Pachuca, Puebla and Toluca.[30]

The driving restriction program was initially successful in reducing pollution levels, as carbon monoxide (CO) fell by 11%. Compliance with the program is near universal. However, as the restriction was made permanent residents began buying second cars to get around the ban, usually used and old polluting cars. A 2008 study from the University of Michigan found that there is no evidence that the restrictions have improved air quality. Evidence from additional sources indicates that the restrictions led to an increase in the total number of vehicles in circulation and the long-term impact of the scheme on CO levels has been a 13% rise.[19][26]

San José edit

An alternate-day travel scheme was introduced in San José, Costa Rica, in August 2005. The goal of the restriction program was to reduced oil consumption with the purpose of mitigating the negative effects of high international oil prices in the Costa Rican economy. The program was implemented when the price of an oil barrel was at US$65 up from US$20 in early 2003. Fuel and oil imports represented in 2007 a 5.6% of the country's GDP, up from 2% ten years earlier.[32]

 
Traffic sign used in San José, Costa Rica, to warn drivers of the prevailing access restriction into the CBD according to license plate number by day of the week.

Initially the driving restriction was applied to enter the capital's central business district and the scheme is based on the last number of the license plate, restricting two numbers per day, Monday through Friday.[9] The travel restrictions were issued initially only during the rush hours, from 7:00 to 8:30 a.m. and 4:00-5:30 p.m.[10]

In June 2008 the restricted cordon area was expanded until San José's Boulevard Circunvalación peripheral ring.[33] The expansion aim was to attain further reductions in oil consumption, as oil prices continued to rise and reached US$130 per barrel in June 2008. Government official estimated that at this price, oil imports will reach US$2.85 billion, representing about a third of the country's export earnings and about 9% of the country's GDP estimated for 2008.[34][35] As the implemented scheme only reduced fuel consumption by 5%, the government decided to expand the restriction hours beginning in July 2008. The road space rationing was expanded to 13 hours for passenger cars and light-duty commercial vehicles, from 6 a.m. through 7 p.m. Heavy-duty commercial vehicles were included in the restriction program but only during rush hours.[36][37]

The alternate-day driving program was suspended in June 2009 as a result of a Constitutional Court ruling in favor a constitutional challenge. The court ruled that the policy infringed the constitutional freedom of movement right, and also that the economic sanctions for this violation were not supported by the existing legal framework.[38] The temporary end of the program resulted in heavy traffic jams all over the city, as traffic volumes within the restricted cordon area increased by 20% to 25%.[39][40] The driving restriction scheme was restored one month later by an Executive Decree based on amendments included in the Traffic Law passed by Congress in 2008. Nevertheless, this time the program was justified on San José's worsening traffic congestion levels instead of the economic impact of high oil prices.[41][42]

Since October 2012 hybrid electric vehicles and all-electric cars are exempted from the driving restriction as part of Costa Rica's government policy to promote the use of clean energy in the country.[43] As a result of multiple legal challenges, traffic engineering authorities decided to conduct periodic effectiveness evaluations of the program.[42] Traffic authorities announced in October 2014 that the results of six studies found that the alternate-day travel restriction reduced the number of vehicles entering downtown San José every working day between 14% and 16%.[44]

Santiago edit

Driving restrictions were introduced in Santiago in 1986, as a measure to mitigate Chile's capital high levels of air pollution. The scheme was based on the last number of the license plate. Two numbers are banned from entering the city between Monday and Friday. In 1992, Santiago reformed its program to adopt vintage-specific restrictions. These restrictions placed higher limits on old, more polluting cars and lower limits on new, less polluting cars. The 1992 reform led to a significant impact on the emissions created by local pollutants in Santiago. A price effect that favored less polluting car models was also seen. Households in localities facing restrictions owned more 1992 or older built vehicles without catalytic converter than households in localities that did not face restrictions. This reform highlights the effect of vintage-specific restrictions on fleet-composition. It does not provide information on how such a policy can be designed and how welfare is impacted by its implementation. It does not provide information on how such a policy can be designed and how welfare is impacted by its implementation.[45]

Initially the restriction applied only to passenger vehicles without a catalytic converter with the aim to reduced particulate matter emissions. As of March 2018, the restriction applies to all cars built before 2012.[46] During critical air pollution events, classified as alert, pre-emergency or emergency, the number of cars restricted to travel are increased by adding additional last number plates. Beginning with pre-emergency state, the restriction might include vehicles with catalytic converter. As the number of registered vehicles with the emission control device surpassed those without it, authorities decided in 2008 to increase the number of vehicles restricted to enter every day to the city, by increasing the restriction to the four last digits instead of the initial two. This scheme produces a theoretical reduction of 40% of vehicles entering the city on a work day.

São Paulo edit

 
Automatic speed limit surveillance devices are used in São Paulo to enforce alternate-day travel restrictions based on license plate numbers.

São Paulo is the largest metropolis in the world with a permanent alternate-day travel restriction (Portuguese: rodízio veicular). The scheme was first implemented in 1995 as a trial on a voluntary basis, and then as a mandatory restriction implemented in August 1996 to mitigate air pollution, and thereafter made permanent in June 1997 to relieve traffic congestion.[47][48] The driving restriction applies to passenger cars and commercial vehicles, and it is based on the last digit of the license plate. Two numbers are restricted to travel every day from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. from Monday through Friday.[49]

Vehicles exempted from the restriction include buses and other urban transportation vehicles, school buses, ambulances and other medical services vehicles, mail and fire cars and trucks, police and military vehicles, cash-in-transit armored vehicles, vehicles delivering perishable food products, properly registered vehicles for use by people with disabilities, and other public utility vehicles.[50] In May 2014 the City Council approved a law to exempt from the restriction plug-in electric vehicles, hybrid electric vehicles and fuel-cell vehicles with a license plate registered in the city.[51][52] The benefits for electric-drive vehicles went into effect in September 2015.[53]

Temporary restrictions edit

Beijing edit

 
Smog over Beijing's Forbidden City.

Temporary driving restrictions were imposed in Beijing from December 8 to 10, 2015, as part of the smog mitigation measures provided for in Beijing's red alert for hazardous smog, the first such alert issued ever. The smog alert system was put in place in 2013, and a red alert should go into effect if there is a prediction that the air quality index will stay over 200 for more than 72 hours. On the evening of December 7 the index was 253 according to Beijing's authorities. Under a red alert half of the city's cars are ordered off the streets through a temporary alternate-day travel scheme based on the cars' license plate numbers. Only cars with even-numbered license plates were allowed on the roads during the first day of the restriction.[54][55] Electric cars are not subject to the driving restriction, as a government incentive to promote the use of cleaner vehicles.[56]

According to the Ministry of Environmental Protection, the combined effect of all the restrictions imposed reduced pollutant emissions in Beijing by 30% during day one of the city's first red alert for smog. Environmentalist from Beijing University of Technology estimated that without the measures, the density of PM2.5 would have risen by 10% in that period.[57] A second red alert for pollution was issued on December 18, 2015. Temporary driving restrictions were imposed for four days, beginning at 7 a.m. on December 19 and ending on the 23rd at midnight.[58]

On 16 December 2016, Beijing authorities declared a five-day pollution “red alert” due to a heavy pollution event. Among other measures, about half the cars were restricted through a temporary alternate-day travel scheme, and older and “dirty” high-emissions vehicles were forbidden to circulate. Public transport services in the city were increased, with about 3,600 buses on duty. The Ministry of Environmental Protection reported that 21 other cities across north and central China had also declared pollution red alerts, including Tianjin, Shijiazhuang, Taiyuan, and Zhengzhou.[59][60] The red alert was lifted on 22 December 2016 as the winds cleared pollution away the night before.[61]

Italy edit

In December 2015, several Italian cities implemented temporary driving restrictions due to severe air pollution levels. The restrictions were issued in Rome, Milan and other cities in the Lombardy region, including Pavia, Buccinasco, Cesano Boscone, Cernusco sul Naviglio, Bresso, Cinisello Balsamo, Cormano, Corsico, Cusano Milanino, Paderno Dugnano and Sesto San Giovanni.[62][63] Italy had the most pollution-related deaths in Europe in 2012. Over 84,000 people in the country died prematurely owing to bad air quality, according to the European Environment Agency (EEA).[62]

Milan edit
 
Severe smog over Milan seem from a neighboring town.

Milan was named as Europe's most polluted city in 2008 and remains among the worst on the continent. City officials have limited traffic on several occasions since 2007 to curb bad air quality.[62] Due to record high air pollution levels, Milanese authorities ban cars, motorcycles and scooters for six hours a day, between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. for three days during the last week of December 2015. Local authorities introduced a special "anti-smog" all-day public transport ticket for €1.50 (~US$1.65).[62][63][64] Neighboring towns and municipalities in the Lombardy region, including Pavia, Cinisello Balsamo, Paderno Dugnano, and Sesto San Giovanni, also implemented the temporary driving restriction.[63] Electric vehicles and carsharing cars are exempted from the ban.[63][65]

Rome edit

An alternate-day travel scheme was implemented in Rome to curb severe air pollution in the city, which has high concentrations of particulate matter and nitrogen dioxide. The scheme was in force for several days during the last two weeks of December 2015. The driving restriction is based on the last digits of license plate numbers and was implemented for a total of nine hours, from 7:30 to 12:30 and 16:30 until 20:30. To promote ridership by public transportation, €1.50 (~US$1.65) single-ride transit tickets became passes valid all day. Environmentally friendly vehicles, such as hybrids and natural gas vehicles are exempt from the restriction. The most polluting vehicles, such as gasoline-powered cars compliant with Euro 0 and 1 standards, and diesel cars up to Euro 2, can not enter the city independently of the number plate. Rome authorities resorted to limit traffic in the city on several occasions during the fall of 2015 due to high air pollution.[62][63][64]

Oslo edit

 
A ban on diesel-powered cars from municipal roads was implemented in Oslo on 17 January 2017.

In January 2017 a combination of cold, still winter weather and poor air quality prompted Oslo city authorities to ban diesel-powered cars from municipal roads to combat rising air pollution for at least two days. The ban did not apply on the national motorways. This was the first time ever Oslo implemented a ban of this type after the city council agreed on the use of such a measure in February 2016. The diesel ban went into effect from 6 a.m. until 10 p.m on 17 January 2017, and motorists violating the ban were fined 1,500 kroner (~ US$180).[66][67] The temporary ban scheduled for 18 January was lifted after officials said the weather forecast indicated that higher altitude winds would clear the air.[68]

The restriction did not apply to heavy vehicles with Euro VI technology, gasoline-powered cars, electric cars and plug-in hybrid vehicles, emergency vehicles, goods transport, diplomatic vehicles, handicap transport, public service vehicles, and cars carrying a patient to a doctor appointment.[69] The restriction angered some motorists, who were encouraged by Norwegian authorities in 2006 to opt for diesel vehicles, which at the time were considered a better environmental choice than gasoline-powered cars.[66][67]

Paris edit

 
Traffic was restricted in Paris in March 2014 due to a peak in the levels of particulate matter.

On March 17, 2014, a partial driving restriction was imposed in Paris and its inner suburbs based on license plate numbers. The measure was issued by the city government in order to mitigate a peak in air pollution, caused by particulate matter (PM 10) attributable to vehicle emissions. Cars with even-numbered license plates and commercial vehicles over 3.5 tons were banned from entering the city from 5:30 a.m. until midnight. Electric and hybrid cars, natural gas-powered vehicles and carpools with three or more passengers were exempted. Only once before this type of restriction had been implemented in the city for one day in 1997. The week before the traffic restriction was imposed, the government also reduced speed limits around Paris by 20 km (12 mi) per hour, provided all public transportation for free, and the short-term subscriptions of the Vélib bikesharing program, and the first hour of the Autolib carsharing service were free. The measure was not extended to the following day due to the improvement of air quality.[70][71] [72][73]

 
A driving restriction of four days took effect in December 2016 due to the persistence of pollution of fine particles and nitrogen dioxide.

Another peak in air pollution affected Paris and Northern France in mid March 2015. The Mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, requested the central government to implement a driving restriction to mitigate the problem. The pollution index in Paris at 93 micrograms per cubic meter (mcg/m3) on Friday 20, 2015, due to increase amounts of pollutant PM10. The accepted limit for PM10 is set at 50 mcg/m3, and the safe limit or alert threshold is set at 80 mcg/m3.[74][75] As the pollution episode continued on Saturday 21 according to Airparif measurements, the central government imposed a driving restriction on Monday 23 affecting cars with even-numbered license plates and commercial vehicles over 3.5 tons. Taxis, ambulances, carpools with three or more passengers, electric cars and other environmentally friendly vehicles were exempted. As in the 2014 episode, complementary measures were implemented including reduced speed limits in the city, free public transportation, free residential parking, and free short-term use for subscribers of bike and carsharing services. The restriction was implemented in Paris and 22 towns located in the administrative region of Île-de-France.[76]

In early December 2016, Paris and its surrounding region suffered for a week the longest and most intense winter pollution episode in 10 years.[77] A driving restriction went into effect in Paris and 22 surrounding towns for four days, from Tuesday 6 to Friday 9, due to the persistence of pollution of fine particles and nitrogen dioxide. The restriction was extended for the first time in the cities of Villeurbanne and Lyon on Friday December 9. This was the fourth time in twenty years that alternating traffic is implemented in the capital, but the first time it is maintained for several days in a row.[78][79][80]

In May 2016, the city of Paris launched a scheme called "Paris Respire" (literally "Paris breathes") as part of which certain areas of the city are closed to vehicular traffic on Sundays and public holidays.[81][82]

New Delhi edit

According to the World Health Organization, in 2014, New Delhi had the most polluted air of about 1,600 cities the organization tracked around the world. According to India's Central Pollution Control Board, the city's air pollution had been in the severe category on nearly three-quarter of the days in November 2015. The Delhi High Court asked the government to take action to curb air pollution on 30 November 2015.[83]

 
Dense smog at Connaught Place, New Delhi.

In an attempt to mitigate severe air pollution in New Delhi, which gets worst during the winter, a temporary alternate-day travel scheme for cars using the odd- and even-numbered license plates system was announced by Delhi government in December 2015. In addition, trucks were allowed to enter India's capital only after 11 p.m., two hours later than the existing restriction.[83] Almost 9 million vehicles are registered in Delhi.[84] The driving restriction scheme went into effect as a trial for an initial period of 15 days, from 1 to 15 January 2016. The restriction was in force from 8 a.m. till 8 p.m., and traffic was not restricted on Sundays. The scheme was expected to take more than a million private cars off the road every day.[85][86]

Public transportation service was increased during the restriction period.[83] A total of 27 exemptions to the restriction were allowed by the government, including all motorcycles, benefiting more than 5 million motorcyclists, all female drivers traveling alone, to ensure women's security, and several categories of official vehicles, including those of high-ranking officials. During the first day of the restriction there was acceptance by the general population.[84][86]

A petition was filed in the Delhi High Court against the government in order to stop the implementation of the restriction driving scheme. On 9 December 2015, the Court decided to put on hold the analysis of the petition until more details of the scheme are defined by the government, and considering that no official notification has been issued by a public agency. A hearing was scheduled for December 23 for further analysis.[87] The most contested exemption is the one for female drivers, and a legal petition was filed. A court had to decide whether it is discriminatory to allow women to drive around Delhi while some of males will be forced to leave their vehicles at home.[86]

On 16 December 2015, the Supreme Court of India mandated several restrictions to curb pollution. Among the measures, the court banned the sale of new cars that have diesel engines and sport utility vehicles with an engine greater than 2000 cc until 31 March 2016. The court also ordered all taxis in the Delhi region to switch to compressed natural gas by 1 March 2016. Transportation vehicles than are more than 10 years old were banned from entering the capital.[88]

Summer Olympics edit

Beijing 2008 edit

On July 20, 2008, Beijing implemented a temporary road space rationing scheme based on plate numbers in order to significantly improve air quality in the city during the 2008 Summer Olympics.[89][90] Enforcement was carried out through an automated traffic surveillance network. The rationing was in effect for two months, between July 20 and September 20, as the Olympics were followed by the Paralympics from September 6 until 17.[91] The restrictions on car use was implemented on alternate days depending on the plates ending in odd or even numbers. This measure was expected to take 45% of the 3.3 million car fleet off the streets. In addition, 300,000 heavy polluting vehicles were banned from July 1,[92] and the measure also prohibited access to most vehicles coming from outside Beijing. Authorities decided to compensate car owners for the inconvenience, by exempting them from payment of vehicle taxes for three months.[93]

 
Typical severe air pollution day in Beijing

A pilot test was conducted in August 2007 for four days, restricting driving for a third of Beijing's fleet, some 1.3 million vehicles.[94] A 40% daily reduction of vehicle emissions was reported.[95] A previous test carried out in November 2006 during the Sino-African Summit show reductions of 40% in NOx auto emissions.[96]

Post-Olympics permanent rule edit

The driving restriction during the Olympics was so successful in cleaning the air and relieving traffic congestion, that a modified version of the scheme was made permanent afterward in October 2008, now banning 20% of the vehicles on a given weekday instead of half the vehicles as implemented during the Olympics.[97][98] Also a ban on heavy trucks from entering the city during the day was implemented, and the oldest most polluting automobiles, called "yellow-label" cars, after the sticker fixed to their windshields, are banned from entering the city center. In July 2009 a nationwide car scrappage program was implemented offering rebates for trade in old heavy polluting cars and trucks for new ones.[97] As of June 2016, in addition to Beijing, another 11 Chinese cities have similar restriction schemes in place.[99]

London 2012 edit

The 2012 Summer Olympics organization, with support from the Mayor of London office,[100] announced in 2007 that they are planning auto exclusion zones around all venues, including London, Birmingham, Manchester, Newcastle upon Tyne, Glasgow and Cardiff.[101] London authorities hope this measure will work as an experiment to change the public's travel behavior, allowing thereafter a shift from automobile to mass transit or bicycling. This severe policy has been publicized as the "First Car-free Olympics". During the peak events, the Olympics expect a crowd of 800,000 people. Those attending will have to travel by public transport, mainly through the Underground, or by bicycle or on foot.[102] This strategy was deemed effective and successful by Transport for London. Over 60 million passengers used the tube, which was 30% more than usual usage. Road Traffic was reduced by 15% and only 30% of designated game lanes were in operation each day of the Olympics. Regular transport users altered their travel methods and times to avoid hotspots during the games. The success of the strategy was largely due to the cooperation of the residents of London and visitors attending the games.[103]

Similar management and rationing policies edit

Congestion pricing edit

Transport economists consider road space rationing a variation of road pricing, and an alternative to congestion pricing, but road space rationing is considered more equitable by some, as the restrictions force all drivers to reduce auto travel, while congestion pricing restrains less those who can afford paying the congestion charge. Nevertheless, high-income users can often avoid the restrictions by owning a second car.[104] Moreover, congestion pricing (unlike rationing) acts "to allocate a scarce resource to its most valuable use, as evinced by users' willingness to pay for the resource". While some "opponents of congestion pricing fear that tolled roads will be used only by people with high income. But preliminary evidence suggests that the new toll lanes in California are used by people of all income groups. The ability to get somewhere fast and reliably is valued in a variety of circumstances. Not everyone will need or want to incur a toll on a daily basis, but on occasions when getting somewhere quickly is necessary, the option of paying to save time is valuable to people at all income levels."[105]

Mobility rights or congestion credits edit

A more recent idea for automobile travel restrictions, proposed by some transport economists[106] to avoid inequality and revenue allocation issues, is to implement a rationing of peak period travel but through revenue-neutral credit-based congestion pricing. This concept is similar to the existing system of emissions trading of carbon credits, proposed by the Kyoto Protocol to curb greenhouse emissions. Metropolitan area or city residents, or the taxpayers, will have the option to use the local government-issued mobility rights or congestion credits for themselves, or to trade or sell them to anyone willing to continue traveling by automobile beyond the personal quota. This trading system will allow direct benefits to be accrued by those users shifting to public transportation or by those reducing their peak-hour travel rather than the government.[2][107]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Online TDM Encyclopedia - Vehicle restrictions
  • The effect of transport policies on car use: Evidence from Latin American cities, Journal of Public Economics, November 2013
  • , Environment for Development, September 2013.

road, space, rationing, this, article, about, regulatory, monetary, policies, reduce, traffic, levels, from, motorized, vehicles, monetary, policies, reduce, congestion, other, externalities, road, pricing, confused, with, road, diet, also, known, alternate, t. This article is about regulatory and non monetary policies to reduce traffic levels from motorized vehicles For monetary policies to reduce congestion and other externalities see road pricing Not to be confused with road diet Road space rationing also known as alternate day travel driving restriction and no drive days Spanish restriccion vehicular Portuguese rodizio veicular French circulation alternee is a travel demand management strategy aimed to reduce the negative externalities generated by urban air pollution or peak urban travel demand in excess of available supply or road capacity through artificially restricting demand vehicle travel by rationing the scarce common good road capacity especially during the peak periods or during peak pollution events This objective is achieved by restricting traffic access into an urban cordon area city center CBD or district based upon the last digits of the license number on pre established days and during certain periods usually the peak hours Road space requirements for 30 people in 20 cars left compared to 30 people on bicycles middle and 30 people in a single bus right Traffic congestion persists despite Sao Paulo s municipal no drive days based on license numbers implemented since 1997 Sao Paulo downtown Brazil The practical implementation of this traffic restraint policy is common in Latin America and in many cases the road rationing has as a main goal the reduction of air pollution such as the cases of Mexico City and Santiago Chile Sao Paulo with a fleet of 6 million vehicles in 2007 is the largest metropolis in the world with such a travel restriction implemented first in 1996 as measured to mitigate air pollution and thereafter made permanent in 1997 to relieve traffic congestion More recent implementations in Costa Rica and Honduras have had the objective of reducing oil consumption due to the high impact this import has on the economy of small countries and considering the steep increases in oil prices that began in 2003 Bogota Quito and La Paz Bolivia also have similar driving restriction schemes in place After a temporary implementation of road space rationing to reduce air pollution in Beijing during the 2008 Summer Olympics local officials put in place several permanent rationing schemes to improve the city s air quality As of June 2016 update another 11 Chinese cities have similar restriction schemes in place Also temporary driving restrictions to reduce cars on the streets by half during severe pollution events have been implemented in Paris and surrounding suburbs in March 2014 March 2015 and December 2016 in Beijing twice in December 2015 and one more time in December 2016 and also in Rome and Milan for several days in December 2015 A similar alternate day travel temporary scheme was implemented in New Delhi as a two week trial in January 2016 A temporary ban on diesel cars was implemented in Oslo on municipal roads in January 2017 Contents 1 Historical background 2 Effectiveness 2 1 Evaluating effectiveness 3 Applications of road space rationing 3 1 Permanent alternate day travel schemes 3 1 1 Athens 3 1 2 Bogota 3 1 3 Jakarta 3 1 4 Mexico City 3 1 5 San Jose 3 1 6 Santiago 3 1 7 Sao Paulo 3 2 Temporary restrictions 3 2 1 Beijing 3 2 2 Italy 3 2 2 1 Milan 3 2 2 2 Rome 3 2 3 Oslo 3 2 4 Paris 3 2 5 New Delhi 4 Summer Olympics 4 1 Beijing 2008 4 1 1 Post Olympics permanent rule 4 2 London 2012 5 Similar management and rationing policies 5 1 Congestion pricing 5 2 Mobility rights or congestion credits 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistorical background editThe earliest known implementation of road space rationing took place in Ancient Rome as carriages and carts pulled by horses created serious congestion problems in several Roman cities In 45 B C Julius Caesar declared the center of Rome off limits between 6 a m and 4 p m to all vehicles except for carriages transporting priests officials visitors and high ranking citizens 1 Effectiveness edit nbsp Road Space Rationing impacts behavioral changes and may lead to the ultimate outcome i e end traffic congestion Other factors impacting these changes make it hard to isolate the singular effects of Road Space Rationing regulations Schemes rationing access based on number plate have mixed results If used infrequently or temporarily the alternate day travel policy can have some impact However if used as a long term measure inequality issues might arise as wealthier people can afford to own two cars with opposite parity number plates to circumvent any restrictions with the second vehicle being often older and therefore more polluting 2 Cities such as Tehran which have used such schemes are now looking to more sustainable methods of traffic and emissions control 3 such as low emission zone or traffic limited zones as used in Europe 4 Access regulations have often been found to be effective in reducing congestion traffic and pollution 5 The program s impact on moving behavior to more sustainable transport methods is also unclear Evaluations on the effectiveness of road space rationing regulations focus mainly on whether there is a decrease in the usage of the less sustainable vehicles for which the schemes were implemented in the first place They do not focus on whether there is a change in the pattern in which such vehicles are used For example evaluations examine how many people stop using a polluting car They do not evaluate how many people start riding bicycles or carpool as a result of such schemes 6 Evaluating effectiveness edit It is important to better understand the effectiveness of the regulatory policies intended to reduce traffic congestion to improve their implementation in the future Some factors that hinder the effective program evaluation of policies like road space rationing are that transportation demand management strategies are often implemented as a part of other broader policies It is difficult to separate the effects of such methods from the other methods they are associated with Most measures are taken at the beginning and during the implementation of a strategy Not enough evaluation is conducted after strategy implementation In developing countries data insufficiency hinders the formation of generalizable conclusions on the effectiveness of a strategy 6 It is hard to outline a cause and effect relationship between the regulation that is implemented and the change in behavior it creates or general effect it has Many factors could cause a change in the behavior of individuals affected by the regulation at hand It could be the direct result of that regulation or the result of other existing regulations and societal effects 6 Given that such programs are not usually implemented in isolation singular conclusions on the effectiveness of regulations impacting traffic congestion are difficult to form Three methods can be employed to measure the effectiveness of regulatory policies The first measure administration evaluation examines how road space rationing is delivered and enforced to the target audience The second measure behavioral evaluation focuses on the extent to which the regulation changes the behavior of the target audience The third measure outcome performance analyzes the outcomes of the regulation To collect information on these measures direct observation stated preferences surveys and revealed preference surveys can be conducted These methods can be conducted in isolation or simultaneously to procure rich data The problems associated with these methods are observer bias in direct observation the spread of misinformation when respondents are untruthful and excess time consumption 6 Applications of road space rationing editPermanent alternate day travel schemes edit See also Unified Vehicular Volume Reduction Program Philippines Road space rationing based on license numbers has been implemented in cities such as Athens 1982 7 Santiago Chile 1986 and extended 2001 Mexico City 1989 Metro Manila 1995 Sao Paulo 1997 Bogota Colombia 1998 La Paz Bolivia 2003 8 San Jose Costa Rica 2005 9 10 countrywide in Honduras 2008 11 and Quito Ecuador 2010 12 All these cities restrain a percentage of vehicles every weekday during rush hours or for the entire day When the restriction is based in two digits a theoretical 20 reduction of traffic is expected Cities with serious air quality problems such as Mexico City and Santiago use more digits to achieve greater reductions in air pollution and even the prohibition can be for more than one day a week In Bogota Colombia from 2009 the plate restriction was extended from peak periods to the whole day from 06 00 to 20 00 hours in the whole city citation needed Bertrand Delanoe the mayor of Paris proposed to impose a complete ban on motor vehicles in the city s inner districts with exemptions only for residents businesses and the disabled as a three part plan to implement during a seven year period 13 This proposal was made in 2005 in the context of Paris bid to host the 2012 Summer Olympics 14 which ended up being won by London During the discussions regarding the proposal to introduce congestion pricing in New York the commission created in 2007 by the New York State Legislature to evaluate other traffic relief options considered road space rationing based on license plates as an alternative to congestion pricing 15 The proposal stalled in April 2008 as the legislature decided not to vote the proposed plan 16 Athens edit Main article Dactylius Rising traffic in Athens during the 1990s led to the development of the Dactylius Greek Daktylios romanized Daktylios lit ring around central Athens The Dactylius does not require drivers to pay in order to enter the areas subjected to the Dactylius restrictions Instead the scheme depends on the parity of the date and of the vehicle s registration plate the vehicle type as well as the time of the week month There are three Dactylius areas The Inner the Outer and the Green each one with its own policies citation needed Bogota edit Main article Pico y placa Then mayor Enrique Penalosa introduced in Bogota Colombia in 1998 a driving restriction program Pico y placa literally in Spanish peak and license plate to reduce traffic congestion during rush hours 17 The system restricts traffic access into a pre established urban area for vehicles with license plate numbers ending in certain digits on pre established days and during certain hours based on the last digit of the licence plate numbers Initially the system restricted traffic between 7 00 and 9 00 a m and between 5 30 and 7 30 p m Monday through Friday for two days for each registered vehicle 17 18 Then mayor Antanas Mockus extended the restriction for one hour in 2001 A complementary program called El Pico y Placa Ambiental literally in Spanish environmental peak and license plate was implemented by then mayor Luis Eduardo Garzon in 2006 expanding the restriction to public transportation vehicles including both bus and taxi services 18 Four numbers were restricted every day for private use vehicles and two for public transportation vehicles Since 2002 Bogota s scheme switched the combinations of days and numbers every year making it harder to circumvent the restriction by buying another car 19 Starting in February 2009 then mayor Samuel Moreno Rojas extended the restriction from 6 a m to 8 p m Monday through Friday This extension was issued as a temporary measure until public works related with the Transmilenio BRT were completed 20 In July 2012 then mayor Gustavo Petro reduced the hours of the restriction from 14 to 7 hours per day to restrict access only between 6 00 and 8 30 a m and between 3 00 and 7 30 p m In addition five neighborhoods were released from the restriction Usme Rafael Uribe Uribe Tunjuelito San Cristobal and Ciudad Bolivar Also under the modified scheme five ending numbers are restricted every day between Monday and Friday license plated ending on odd numbers are restricted on odd days of the month and even numbers on even days 18 21 Since December 2014 exempted vehicles include passenger cars with three or more passengers including the driver properly registered vehicles for use by people with disabilities all electric vehicles emergency vehicles such police cars ambulances and fire trucks properly identified public utilities vehicles traffic control and towing vehicles school buses motorcycles cash in transit armored vehicles funeral vehicles and press judiciary diplomatic presidential motorcade and security escort vehicles 22 Similar schemes with the same name have been implemented in several Colombian cities including Armenia Barranquilla Bucaramanga Cali Cartagena Manizales Medellin and Pereira citation needed Jakarta edit The no drive day in Jakarta is known as Ganjil Genap even and odd days in Indonesian This policy imitates what has been done in Beijing during the Olympics Policeman checks license plate s last digit on the entrance of avenue or expressway A car with even license plate for example B 1000 LA obsolete plate of Idris Sardi car is allowed to pass in even days but will be fined when they pass that road in odd days Drivers might get even odd days information from social media to radio stations The Ganjil Genap first time implemented in Sudirman Avenue on 27 July 2016 23 Ganjil Genap was implemented due to 3 in 1 policy termination started from 16 May 2016 by former Jakarta Governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama or Ahok 24 3 in 1 policy banned vehicles containing less than 3 passengers 3 in 1 existed for 12 years and a half 23 December 2003 16 May 2016 but abandoned by Basuki due to a trick known as joki 3 in 1 He said that joki 3 in 1 practice often exploited kids just to fill the car to 3 people when passing checkpoints 25 Police authorities also admitted that control of 3 in 1 was harder than license plate checking due to joki 3 in 1 hack In 2018 license plate checking also applied on expressways bound to Jakarta suburban area Jabodetabek License plates are checked in toll booths Bekasi Cibubur border of Jakarta and Depok and Tangerang Only overcrowded toll booths apply this ban Existing Ganjil Genap in Jakarta was extended from 6 am starts from 23 April 2018 Mexico City edit Main article Hoy no Circula Mexico City Mexico City started in November 1989 its driving restriction program Hoy no Circula literally in Spanish today your car does not circulate known as No drive days which consisted of prohibiting the circulation of 20 of vehicles from Monday to Friday depending on the last digit of their license plates Record levels of ozone and other airborne pollutants led the city government to implement the scheme 19 26 The program was planned to apply only during the winter when air pollution is at its worst Winter follows the rainy season when thermal inversion an atmospheric condition which traps smog and pollution close to the ground increases air pollution noticeably However the program was made permanent at the end of the 1990 winter season citation needed nbsp Severe smog over Mexico City The program is intended to improve the air quality of Mexico City The restriction is based on the last digit of the license plate Two numbers are restricted to travel every day from 5 a m to 10 p m The restrictions apply to the entire Mexico City metropolitan area therefore a similar coordinated program operates within the State of Mexico including the 18 neighboring municipalities which surrounds Mexico City on three sides Atizapan de Zaragoza Coacalco de Berriozabal Cuautitlan Cuautitlan Izcalli Chalco Chimalhuacan Chicoloapan Ecatepec de Morelos Huixquilucan Ixtapaluca La Paz Naucalpan de Juarez Nezahualcoyotl Nicolas Romero Tecamac Tlalnepantla de Baz Tultitlan and Valle de Chalco Solidaridad 26 27 Hoy No Circula is coupled with an exhaust monitoring program known as Verificacion in Spanish verification whereby a car s pollutant emissions are analyzed every six months A colored sticker based on a vehicle s license plate number is affixed to each vehicle following an emissions test indicating whether a vehicle is exempt from the program or not Hybrid electric vehicles and electric vehicles are exempted There are other restrictions that are applicable to non local vehicles and foreigners 28 29 In June 2015 the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation ruled in favor a constitutional challenge and ordered that passenger cars with model year older than 2007 shall be restricted based on their actual tailpipe emissions and not on how old the car is 30 Taxis buses police cars ambulances fire trucks commercial vehicles operating with liquid propane gas and commercial vehicles transporting perishable goods are exempt In 2008 the scheme in Mexico City was extended to limit driving into the city one Saturday every month but only applies to cars that are more than 10 years old sticker 2 Foreign plated vehicles without emissions stickers are restricted all day every Saturday 31 Similar alternate day travel restriction programs have been implemented in Pachuca Puebla and Toluca 30 The driving restriction program was initially successful in reducing pollution levels as carbon monoxide CO fell by 11 Compliance with the program is near universal However as the restriction was made permanent residents began buying second cars to get around the ban usually used and old polluting cars A 2008 study from the University of Michigan found that there is no evidence that the restrictions have improved air quality Evidence from additional sources indicates that the restrictions led to an increase in the total number of vehicles in circulation and the long term impact of the scheme on CO levels has been a 13 rise 19 26 San Jose edit An alternate day travel scheme was introduced in San Jose Costa Rica in August 2005 The goal of the restriction program was to reduced oil consumption with the purpose of mitigating the negative effects of high international oil prices in the Costa Rican economy The program was implemented when the price of an oil barrel was at US 65 up from US 20 in early 2003 Fuel and oil imports represented in 2007 a 5 6 of the country s GDP up from 2 ten years earlier 32 nbsp Traffic sign used in San Jose Costa Rica to warn drivers of the prevailing access restriction into the CBD according to license plate number by day of the week Initially the driving restriction was applied to enter the capital s central business district and the scheme is based on the last number of the license plate restricting two numbers per day Monday through Friday 9 The travel restrictions were issued initially only during the rush hours from 7 00 to 8 30 a m and 4 00 5 30 p m 10 In June 2008 the restricted cordon area was expanded until San Jose s Boulevard Circunvalacion peripheral ring 33 The expansion aim was to attain further reductions in oil consumption as oil prices continued to rise and reached US 130 per barrel in June 2008 Government official estimated that at this price oil imports will reach US 2 85 billion representing about a third of the country s export earnings and about 9 of the country s GDP estimated for 2008 34 35 As the implemented scheme only reduced fuel consumption by 5 the government decided to expand the restriction hours beginning in July 2008 The road space rationing was expanded to 13 hours for passenger cars and light duty commercial vehicles from 6 a m through 7 p m Heavy duty commercial vehicles were included in the restriction program but only during rush hours 36 37 The alternate day driving program was suspended in June 2009 as a result of a Constitutional Court ruling in favor a constitutional challenge The court ruled that the policy infringed the constitutional freedom of movement right and also that the economic sanctions for this violation were not supported by the existing legal framework 38 The temporary end of the program resulted in heavy traffic jams all over the city as traffic volumes within the restricted cordon area increased by 20 to 25 39 40 The driving restriction scheme was restored one month later by an Executive Decree based on amendments included in the Traffic Law passed by Congress in 2008 Nevertheless this time the program was justified on San Jose s worsening traffic congestion levels instead of the economic impact of high oil prices 41 42 Since October 2012 hybrid electric vehicles and all electric cars are exempted from the driving restriction as part of Costa Rica s government policy to promote the use of clean energy in the country 43 As a result of multiple legal challenges traffic engineering authorities decided to conduct periodic effectiveness evaluations of the program 42 Traffic authorities announced in October 2014 that the results of six studies found that the alternate day travel restriction reduced the number of vehicles entering downtown San Jose every working day between 14 and 16 44 Santiago edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message Driving restrictions were introduced in Santiago in 1986 as a measure to mitigate Chile s capital high levels of air pollution The scheme was based on the last number of the license plate Two numbers are banned from entering the city between Monday and Friday In 1992 Santiago reformed its program to adopt vintage specific restrictions These restrictions placed higher limits on old more polluting cars and lower limits on new less polluting cars The 1992 reform led to a significant impact on the emissions created by local pollutants in Santiago A price effect that favored less polluting car models was also seen Households in localities facing restrictions owned more 1992 or older built vehicles without catalytic converter than households in localities that did not face restrictions This reform highlights the effect of vintage specific restrictions on fleet composition It does not provide information on how such a policy can be designed and how welfare is impacted by its implementation It does not provide information on how such a policy can be designed and how welfare is impacted by its implementation 45 Initially the restriction applied only to passenger vehicles without a catalytic converter with the aim to reduced particulate matter emissions As of March 2018 the restriction applies to all cars built before 2012 46 During critical air pollution events classified as alert pre emergency or emergency the number of cars restricted to travel are increased by adding additional last number plates Beginning with pre emergency state the restriction might include vehicles with catalytic converter As the number of registered vehicles with the emission control device surpassed those without it authorities decided in 2008 to increase the number of vehicles restricted to enter every day to the city by increasing the restriction to the four last digits instead of the initial two This scheme produces a theoretical reduction of 40 of vehicles entering the city on a work day Sao Paulo edit Main article Vehicle Restriction in Sao Paulo nbsp Automatic speed limit surveillance devices are used in Sao Paulo to enforce alternate day travel restrictions based on license plate numbers Sao Paulo is the largest metropolis in the world with a permanent alternate day travel restriction Portuguese rodizio veicular The scheme was first implemented in 1995 as a trial on a voluntary basis and then as a mandatory restriction implemented in August 1996 to mitigate air pollution and thereafter made permanent in June 1997 to relieve traffic congestion 47 48 The driving restriction applies to passenger cars and commercial vehicles and it is based on the last digit of the license plate Two numbers are restricted to travel every day from 7 a m to 10 a m and 5 p m to 8 p m from Monday through Friday 49 Vehicles exempted from the restriction include buses and other urban transportation vehicles school buses ambulances and other medical services vehicles mail and fire cars and trucks police and military vehicles cash in transit armored vehicles vehicles delivering perishable food products properly registered vehicles for use by people with disabilities and other public utility vehicles 50 In May 2014 the City Council approved a law to exempt from the restriction plug in electric vehicles hybrid electric vehicles and fuel cell vehicles with a license plate registered in the city 51 52 The benefits for electric drive vehicles went into effect in September 2015 53 Temporary restrictions edit Beijing edit Main article Road space rationing in Beijing nbsp Smog over Beijing s Forbidden City Temporary driving restrictions were imposed in Beijing from December 8 to 10 2015 as part of the smog mitigation measures provided for in Beijing s red alert for hazardous smog the first such alert issued ever The smog alert system was put in place in 2013 and a red alert should go into effect if there is a prediction that the air quality index will stay over 200 for more than 72 hours On the evening of December 7 the index was 253 according to Beijing s authorities Under a red alert half of the city s cars are ordered off the streets through a temporary alternate day travel scheme based on the cars license plate numbers Only cars with even numbered license plates were allowed on the roads during the first day of the restriction 54 55 Electric cars are not subject to the driving restriction as a government incentive to promote the use of cleaner vehicles 56 According to the Ministry of Environmental Protection the combined effect of all the restrictions imposed reduced pollutant emissions in Beijing by 30 during day one of the city s first red alert for smog Environmentalist from Beijing University of Technology estimated that without the measures the density of PM2 5 would have risen by 10 in that period 57 A second red alert for pollution was issued on December 18 2015 Temporary driving restrictions were imposed for four days beginning at 7 a m on December 19 and ending on the 23rd at midnight 58 On 16 December 2016 Beijing authorities declared a five day pollution red alert due to a heavy pollution event Among other measures about half the cars were restricted through a temporary alternate day travel scheme and older and dirty high emissions vehicles were forbidden to circulate Public transport services in the city were increased with about 3 600 buses on duty The Ministry of Environmental Protection reported that 21 other cities across north and central China had also declared pollution red alerts including Tianjin Shijiazhuang Taiyuan and Zhengzhou 59 60 The red alert was lifted on 22 December 2016 as the winds cleared pollution away the night before 61 Italy edit In December 2015 several Italian cities implemented temporary driving restrictions due to severe air pollution levels The restrictions were issued in Rome Milan and other cities in the Lombardy region including Pavia Buccinasco Cesano Boscone Cernusco sul Naviglio Bresso Cinisello Balsamo Cormano Corsico Cusano Milanino Paderno Dugnano and Sesto San Giovanni 62 63 Italy had the most pollution related deaths in Europe in 2012 Over 84 000 people in the country died prematurely owing to bad air quality according to the European Environment Agency EEA 62 Milan edit nbsp Severe smog over Milan seem from a neighboring town Milan was named as Europe s most polluted city in 2008 and remains among the worst on the continent City officials have limited traffic on several occasions since 2007 to curb bad air quality 62 Due to record high air pollution levels Milanese authorities ban cars motorcycles and scooters for six hours a day between 10 a m and 4 p m for three days during the last week of December 2015 Local authorities introduced a special anti smog all day public transport ticket for 1 50 US 1 65 62 63 64 Neighboring towns and municipalities in the Lombardy region including Pavia Cinisello Balsamo Paderno Dugnano and Sesto San Giovanni also implemented the temporary driving restriction 63 Electric vehicles and carsharing cars are exempted from the ban 63 65 Rome edit An alternate day travel scheme was implemented in Rome to curb severe air pollution in the city which has high concentrations of particulate matter and nitrogen dioxide The scheme was in force for several days during the last two weeks of December 2015 The driving restriction is based on the last digits of license plate numbers and was implemented for a total of nine hours from 7 30 to 12 30 and 16 30 until 20 30 To promote ridership by public transportation 1 50 US 1 65 single ride transit tickets became passes valid all day Environmentally friendly vehicles such as hybrids and natural gas vehicles are exempt from the restriction The most polluting vehicles such as gasoline powered cars compliant with Euro 0 and 1 standards and diesel cars up to Euro 2 can not enter the city independently of the number plate Rome authorities resorted to limit traffic in the city on several occasions during the fall of 2015 due to high air pollution 62 63 64 Oslo edit nbsp A ban on diesel powered cars from municipal roads was implemented in Oslo on 17 January 2017 In January 2017 a combination of cold still winter weather and poor air quality prompted Oslo city authorities to ban diesel powered cars from municipal roads to combat rising air pollution for at least two days The ban did not apply on the national motorways This was the first time ever Oslo implemented a ban of this type after the city council agreed on the use of such a measure in February 2016 The diesel ban went into effect from 6 a m until 10 p m on 17 January 2017 and motorists violating the ban were fined 1 500 kroner US 180 66 67 The temporary ban scheduled for 18 January was lifted after officials said the weather forecast indicated that higher altitude winds would clear the air 68 The restriction did not apply to heavy vehicles with Euro VI technology gasoline powered cars electric cars and plug in hybrid vehicles emergency vehicles goods transport diplomatic vehicles handicap transport public service vehicles and cars carrying a patient to a doctor appointment 69 The restriction angered some motorists who were encouraged by Norwegian authorities in 2006 to opt for diesel vehicles which at the time were considered a better environmental choice than gasoline powered cars 66 67 Paris edit See also Paris Breathes nbsp Traffic was restricted in Paris in March 2014 due to a peak in the levels of particulate matter On March 17 2014 a partial driving restriction was imposed in Paris and its inner suburbs based on license plate numbers The measure was issued by the city government in order to mitigate a peak in air pollution caused by particulate matter PM 10 attributable to vehicle emissions Cars with even numbered license plates and commercial vehicles over 3 5 tons were banned from entering the city from 5 30 a m until midnight Electric and hybrid cars natural gas powered vehicles and carpools with three or more passengers were exempted Only once before this type of restriction had been implemented in the city for one day in 1997 The week before the traffic restriction was imposed the government also reduced speed limits around Paris by 20 km 12 mi per hour provided all public transportation for free and the short term subscriptions of the Velib bikesharing program and the first hour of the Autolib carsharing service were free The measure was not extended to the following day due to the improvement of air quality 70 71 72 73 nbsp A driving restriction of four days took effect in December 2016 due to the persistence of pollution of fine particles and nitrogen dioxide Another peak in air pollution affected Paris and Northern France in mid March 2015 The Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo requested the central government to implement a driving restriction to mitigate the problem The pollution index in Paris at 93 micrograms per cubic meter mcg m3 on Friday 20 2015 due to increase amounts of pollutant PM10 The accepted limit for PM10 is set at 50 mcg m3 and the safe limit or alert threshold is set at 80 mcg m3 74 75 As the pollution episode continued on Saturday 21 according to Airparif measurements the central government imposed a driving restriction on Monday 23 affecting cars with even numbered license plates and commercial vehicles over 3 5 tons Taxis ambulances carpools with three or more passengers electric cars and other environmentally friendly vehicles were exempted As in the 2014 episode complementary measures were implemented including reduced speed limits in the city free public transportation free residential parking and free short term use for subscribers of bike and carsharing services The restriction was implemented in Paris and 22 towns located in the administrative region of Ile de France 76 In early December 2016 Paris and its surrounding region suffered for a week the longest and most intense winter pollution episode in 10 years 77 A driving restriction went into effect in Paris and 22 surrounding towns for four days from Tuesday 6 to Friday 9 due to the persistence of pollution of fine particles and nitrogen dioxide The restriction was extended for the first time in the cities of Villeurbanne and Lyon on Friday December 9 This was the fourth time in twenty years that alternating traffic is implemented in the capital but the first time it is maintained for several days in a row 78 79 80 In May 2016 the city of Paris launched a scheme called Paris Respire literally Paris breathes as part of which certain areas of the city are closed to vehicular traffic on Sundays and public holidays 81 82 New Delhi edit According to the World Health Organization in 2014 New Delhi had the most polluted air of about 1 600 cities the organization tracked around the world According to India s Central Pollution Control Board the city s air pollution had been in the severe category on nearly three quarter of the days in November 2015 The Delhi High Court asked the government to take action to curb air pollution on 30 November 2015 83 nbsp Dense smog at Connaught Place New Delhi In an attempt to mitigate severe air pollution in New Delhi which gets worst during the winter a temporary alternate day travel scheme for cars using the odd and even numbered license plates system was announced by Delhi government in December 2015 In addition trucks were allowed to enter India s capital only after 11 p m two hours later than the existing restriction 83 Almost 9 million vehicles are registered in Delhi 84 The driving restriction scheme went into effect as a trial for an initial period of 15 days from 1 to 15 January 2016 The restriction was in force from 8 a m till 8 p m and traffic was not restricted on Sundays The scheme was expected to take more than a million private cars off the road every day 85 86 Public transportation service was increased during the restriction period 83 A total of 27 exemptions to the restriction were allowed by the government including all motorcycles benefiting more than 5 million motorcyclists all female drivers traveling alone to ensure women s security and several categories of official vehicles including those of high ranking officials During the first day of the restriction there was acceptance by the general population 84 86 A petition was filed in the Delhi High Court against the government in order to stop the implementation of the restriction driving scheme On 9 December 2015 the Court decided to put on hold the analysis of the petition until more details of the scheme are defined by the government and considering that no official notification has been issued by a public agency A hearing was scheduled for December 23 for further analysis 87 The most contested exemption is the one for female drivers and a legal petition was filed A court had to decide whether it is discriminatory to allow women to drive around Delhi while some of males will be forced to leave their vehicles at home 86 On 16 December 2015 the Supreme Court of India mandated several restrictions to curb pollution Among the measures the court banned the sale of new cars that have diesel engines and sport utility vehicles with an engine greater than 2000 cc until 31 March 2016 The court also ordered all taxis in the Delhi region to switch to compressed natural gas by 1 March 2016 Transportation vehicles than are more than 10 years old were banned from entering the capital 88 Summer Olympics editBeijing 2008 edit On July 20 2008 Beijing implemented a temporary road space rationing scheme based on plate numbers in order to significantly improve air quality in the city during the 2008 Summer Olympics 89 90 Enforcement was carried out through an automated traffic surveillance network The rationing was in effect for two months between July 20 and September 20 as the Olympics were followed by the Paralympics from September 6 until 17 91 The restrictions on car use was implemented on alternate days depending on the plates ending in odd or even numbers This measure was expected to take 45 of the 3 3 million car fleet off the streets In addition 300 000 heavy polluting vehicles were banned from July 1 92 and the measure also prohibited access to most vehicles coming from outside Beijing Authorities decided to compensate car owners for the inconvenience by exempting them from payment of vehicle taxes for three months 93 nbsp Typical severe air pollution day in Beijing A pilot test was conducted in August 2007 for four days restricting driving for a third of Beijing s fleet some 1 3 million vehicles 94 A 40 daily reduction of vehicle emissions was reported 95 A previous test carried out in November 2006 during the Sino African Summit show reductions of 40 in NOx auto emissions 96 Post Olympics permanent rule edit Main article Road space rationing in Beijing The driving restriction during the Olympics was so successful in cleaning the air and relieving traffic congestion that a modified version of the scheme was made permanent afterward in October 2008 now banning 20 of the vehicles on a given weekday instead of half the vehicles as implemented during the Olympics 97 98 Also a ban on heavy trucks from entering the city during the day was implemented and the oldest most polluting automobiles called yellow label cars after the sticker fixed to their windshields are banned from entering the city center In July 2009 a nationwide car scrappage program was implemented offering rebates for trade in old heavy polluting cars and trucks for new ones 97 As of June 2016 update in addition to Beijing another 11 Chinese cities have similar restriction schemes in place 99 London 2012 edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2014 The 2012 Summer Olympics organization with support from the Mayor of London office 100 announced in 2007 that they are planning auto exclusion zones around all venues including London Birmingham Manchester Newcastle upon Tyne Glasgow and Cardiff 101 London authorities hope this measure will work as an experiment to change the public s travel behavior allowing thereafter a shift from automobile to mass transit or bicycling This severe policy has been publicized as the First Car free Olympics During the peak events the Olympics expect a crowd of 800 000 people Those attending will have to travel by public transport mainly through the Underground or by bicycle or on foot 102 This strategy was deemed effective and successful by Transport for London Over 60 million passengers used the tube which was 30 more than usual usage Road Traffic was reduced by 15 and only 30 of designated game lanes were in operation each day of the Olympics Regular transport users altered their travel methods and times to avoid hotspots during the games The success of the strategy was largely due to the cooperation of the residents of London and visitors attending the games 103 Similar management and rationing policies editCongestion pricing edit Further information Congestion pricing Transport economists consider road space rationing a variation of road pricing and an alternative to congestion pricing but road space rationing is considered more equitable by some as the restrictions force all drivers to reduce auto travel while congestion pricing restrains less those who can afford paying the congestion charge Nevertheless high income users can often avoid the restrictions by owning a second car 104 Moreover congestion pricing unlike rationing acts to allocate a scarce resource to its most valuable use as evinced by users willingness to pay for the resource While some opponents of congestion pricing fear that tolled roads will be used only by people with high income But preliminary evidence suggests that the new toll lanes in California are used by people of all income groups The ability to get somewhere fast and reliably is valued in a variety of circumstances Not everyone will need or want to incur a toll on a daily basis but on occasions when getting somewhere quickly is necessary the option of paying to save time is valuable to people at all income levels 105 Mobility rights or congestion credits edit A more recent idea for automobile travel restrictions proposed by some transport economists 106 to avoid inequality and revenue allocation issues is to implement a rationing of peak period travel but through revenue neutral credit based congestion pricing This concept is similar to the existing system of emissions trading of carbon credits proposed by the Kyoto Protocol to curb greenhouse emissions Metropolitan area or city residents or the taxpayers will have the option to use the local government issued mobility rights or congestion credits for themselves or to trade or sell them to anyone willing to continue traveling by automobile beyond the personal quota This trading system will allow direct benefits to be accrued by those users shifting to public transportation or by those reducing their peak hour travel rather than the government 2 107 See also editCar Free Days Common good economics Commons dilemma Congestion pricing Downs Thomson paradox Externalities Induced demand Jevons paradox Lewis Mogridge position Low emission zone Odd even rationing Public good Rationing Road pricing Traffic calming Tragedy of the CommonsReferences edit Black William R 2010 Sustainable Transportation Problems and Solutions The Guilford Press pp 14 ISBN 978 1 60623 485 3 a b Jose M Viegas October 2001 Making urban road pricing acceptable and effective searching for quality and equity in urban mobility Transport Policy 8 4 289 294 doi 10 1016 S0967 070X 01 00024 5 pp 289 294 Tehran s low emission zone rule gets green light en tehran ir Retrieved 2016 10 15 urban access regulations urbanaccessregulations eu Retrieved 2016 10 15 Overview of website urbanaccessregulations eu Retrieved 2016 10 15 a b c d Frosch Colin Evaluation of Shared Space to Reduce Traffic Congestion A case study on West Virginia University s Downtown Campus Thesis West Virginia University Libraries LEDA Measure License plate based traffic restrictions Athens Greece LEDA database Archived from the original on 2008 02 27 Retrieved 2008 04 09 Los choferes publicos acataron la restriccion in Spanish La Prensa 2003 01 07 Archived from the original on 2006 12 13 Retrieved 2008 04 09 a b Angela Avalos 2005 08 03 Hoy empieza restriccion para autos en centro de San Jose Today begins traffic restriction for cars in downtown San Jose La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2016 05 15 Retrieved 2008 04 08 a b Mercedes Aguero 2006 04 12 Evaluaran restriccion vehicular en capital Driving restriction in the capital city will be evaluated La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2008 09 19 Retrieved 2008 04 08 Unos 39 000 vehiculos dejan de circular en Honduras para ahorrar petroleo in Spanish La Nacion 2007 04 07 Archived from the original on 2008 04 11 Retrieved 2008 04 09 Desde marzo se aplica el pico y placa en la capital in Spanish Diario Hoy 2010 01 10 Archived from the original on 2010 05 08 Retrieved 2010 04 10 Henley Jon 2005 03 15 Paris drive to cut traffic in centre by 75 The Guardian London Retrieved 2008 04 26 Bremner Charles 2005 03 15 Paris bans cars to make way for central pedestrian zone London Times Online Retrieved 2008 04 26 William Neuman 2008 01 25 Traffic Panel Members Expecto to Endorse Fees on Cars The New York Times Retrieved 2008 04 07 Nicholas Confessore 2008 04 08 8 Traffic Fee for Manhattan Gets Nowhere The New York Times Retrieved 2008 04 08 a b Decreto 626 de 1998 Alcalde Mayor Major s Decree 626 of 1998 in Spanish Alcaldia Mayor de Bogota D C 1998 07 15 Retrieved 2016 01 02 a b c Staff 2012 06 12 Pico y Placa marca Petro Pico y Placa Petro brand El Espectador in Spanish Retrieved 2016 01 02 See section La historia del Pico y Placa a b c Karl Mathiesen 2014 03 20 Why licence plate bans don t cut smog The Guardian Retrieved 2016 01 02 Staff 2009 01 24 Pico y placa sera todo el dia para particulares en Bogota a partir del 6 de febrero Pico y Placa will be extended to all day for passenger vehicles in Bogota beginning February 6 El Tiempo Colombia in Spanish Archived from the original on 2012 03 08 Retrieved 2016 01 01 Secretaria Distrital de Movilidad 2015 10 29 Restriccion para vehiculos de servicio particular SDM Restriction for private vehicles in Spanish Alcaldia de Bogota Retrieved 2016 01 02 permanent dead link Decreto 575 de 2013 Alcalde Mayor Major s Decree 575 of 2013 in Spanish Alcaldia de Bogota 2014 12 18 Retrieved 2016 01 03 Pratama Akhdi Martin 2016 07 27 Hari Pertama Uji Coba Ganjil Genap Arus Lalu Lintas di Sudirman Ramai Lancar Kompas com Retrieved 2018 04 22 Lestari Reni 2016 05 16 16 Mei Penghapusan 3 in 1 Mulai Diberlakukan OkeZone com Retrieved 2018 04 22 Lubabah Raynaldo Giffari 2016 03 29 Sejarah Pemberlakuan 3 in 1 di Jakarta Merdeka com Retrieved 2018 04 22 a b c Lucas W Davis 2008 The Effect of Driving Restrictions on Air Quality in Mexico City PDF Journal of Political Economy 2008 vol 116 no 1 Retrieved 2016 01 02 Orlando Maldonado 2016 01 02 Estado descarta aplicar programa Hoy no circula Milenio Retrieved 2016 01 02 AngloInfo 2015 12 04 Driving Restrictions in Mexico City and the State of Mexico Hoy No Circula and Vehicle Verification Angloinfo Retrieved 2016 06 15 Secretaria del Medio Ambiente de la Ciudad de Mexico SEDEMA 2016 Calendario del programa Hoy No Circula 2016 SEDEMA Archived from the original on 2016 01 02 Retrieved 2016 01 02 a b Staff 2015 07 03 Los autos viejos tambien podran tener calcomania 0 en el centro del pais Old cars can also have sticker 0 in the center of the country CNN Mexico in Spanish Retrieved 2016 01 02 Angel Bolanos Sanchez 2008 03 12 Ebrard y Pena Nieto presentan este dia el No circula sabatino La Jornada Retrieved 2016 01 02 Mercedes Aguero 2007 11 29 Factura petrolera costara mas de 1 400 millones Oil bill will cost more than US 1 4 billion La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2008 10 11 Retrieved 2008 04 08 Vanessa Loaiza 2008 06 26 440 conductores multados por violar restricciones en capital 440 drivers fined for violating restrictions in the capital La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2008 06 30 Retrieved 2008 06 26 Esteban Oviedo 2008 06 13 MOPT ampliara restriccion vehicular Ministry of Public Works and Transportation will expand the driving restriction La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2008 06 17 Retrieved 2008 06 13 Esteban Oviedo 2008 06 13 Gobierno aplica subsidio para frenar alza en diesel Government subsidies applied to curb rising diesel prices La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2008 06 15 Retrieved 2008 06 13 Vanessa Loaiza y Alonso Mata 2008 07 09 Manana se iniciara restriccion vehicular de 24 horas en capital Tomorrow will start 24 hour driving restriction in the capital La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2008 07 12 Retrieved 2008 07 09 Vanessa Loaiza 2008 07 10 MOPT reduce horario de restriccion vehicular en la capital Ministry of Public Works and Transportation reduces hours of driving restriction in the capital La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2008 07 13 Retrieved 2008 07 10 Alvaro Murillo 2009 06 13 San Jose se abre a cualquier carro sin importar su placa San Jose is open to any car regardless of its plate number La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2009 06 16 Retrieved 2009 06 13 Alonso Mata 2009 06 15 Largas presas colapsan ingresos a San Jose Long traffic queues collapse entrances to San Jose La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2009 06 18 Retrieved 2009 07 05 Alonso Mata 2009 07 05 Restriccion vehicular volvera en dos semanas Driving restriction will be back in two weeks La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2009 07 08 Retrieved 2009 07 05 Alvaro Murillo 2009 07 16 Restriccion vehicular volvera a aplicarse desde el martes Driving restriction will be in force starting next Tuesday La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2009 07 19 Retrieved 2009 07 17 a b Alonso Mata 2009 07 21 30 000 carros sin poder ingresar hoy a la capital 30 000 cars unable to enter the capital city today La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Archived from the original on 2009 07 24 Retrieved 2009 07 21 Camila Salazar 2013 07 06 Carros hibridos y electricos se abren paso en Costa Rica Hybrid and electric cars make their way in Costa Rica La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Retrieved 2013 07 06 Patricia Recio 2014 10 03 Restriccion vehicular disminuye presas entre un 14 y un 16 Driving restriction reduces traffic jams between 14 and 16 La Nacion San Jose in Spanish Retrieved 2014 10 04 Onursal Bekir Gautam Surhid P 1997 09 30 Vehicular air pollution World Bank Technical Papers doi 10 1596 0 8213 4016 6 ISBN 978 0 8213 4016 5 ISSN 0253 7494 Moreno Gomez Clara Garcia Pastor Antonio 2016 06 07 Diseno de redes de transporte urbano en ciudades de tamano medio El caso practico de Terrassa Libro de Actas CIT2016 XII Congreso de Ingenieria del Transporte Valencia Universitat Politecnica Valencia doi 10 4995 cit2016 2016 2147 ISBN 978 84 608 9960 0 Decreto 41858 97 Decreto nº 41 858 de 12 de junho de 1997 Decree 41 858 97 in Portuguese Jusbrasil 2015 Retrieved 2015 12 31 Fabiana Maranhao 2014 01 09 Rodizio de veiculos em SP e improviso afirma especialista em transito Driving restriction in SP is improvised says traffic expert Universo Online in Portuguese Retrieved 2015 12 31 Companhia de Engenharia de Trafego CET 2015 Rodizio Municipal Como funciona Municipal Alternate day travel How it works in Portuguese CET Retrieved 2015 12 31 Rodizio em Sao Paulo Quem esta liberado do rodizio Alternate day travel in Sao Paulo Who is exempted from the restriction Guia Direitos in Portuguese GuiaDireitos org Archived from the original on 2016 01 23 Retrieved 2015 12 31 Leonardo Felix 2014 09 10 Eletrico BMW i3 chega com preco de 9 populares e isencao do rodizio em SP Electric BMW i3 arrives with a price worth 9 popular cars and exempted from Sao Paulo s driving restriction Universo Online UOL in Portuguese Retrieved 2014 09 21 Eletricos e hibridos Sao Paulo aprova lei de incentivo All electric and hybrids Sao Paulo approves incentives law Automotive Business in Portuguese 2014 05 28 Retrieved 2014 09 21 Isencao de rodizio vai beneficiar 387 carros eletricos e hibridos em SP Driving restriction exemption will benefit 387 electric and hybrid cars Estadao de Sao Paulo in Portuguese Universo Online UOL 2015 09 14 Retrieved 2015 12 31 Te Ping Chen 2015 12 07 Beijing Issues First Ever Red Alert for Hazardous Smog Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2015 12 08 Edward Wong 2015 12 07 Beijing Issues Red Alert Over Air Pollution for the First Time The New York Times Retrieved 2015 12 08 Benjamin Dooley 2015 12 08 Beijing slashes traffic in pollution red alert Agence France Presse Yahoo News Retrieved 2015 12 08 Red alert cuts Beijing emissions by 30 Xinhua News Agency China Daily 2015 12 12 Retrieved 2015 12 19 Edward Wong 2015 12 17 Beijing Issues a Second Red Alert on Pollution The New York Times Retrieved 2015 12 19 Phillips Tom 2016 12 17 Beijing smog pollution red alert declared in China capital and 21 other cities The Guardian Retrieved 2016 12 25 China Focus A city sighs as Beijing s heavy smog continues Xinhua Xinhua English News 2016 12 20 Archived from the original on December 21 2016 Retrieved 2016 12 25 Blanchard Ben 2016 12 22 Blue skies return to Beijing as wind clears dangerous pollution Reuters Retrieved 2016 12 25 a b c d e Italy smog Milan and Rome ban cars as pollution rises BBC News 2015 12 28 Retrieved 2015 12 30 a b c d e Daniele Mascolo 2015 12 28 Guida al blocco del traffico a Milano e Roma Guide to restrict traffic in Milan and Rome Agenzia Nazionale Stampa Associata ANSA in Italian Ilpost it Retrieved 2015 12 30 a b Gaia Pianigiani 2015 12 24 Italy Dirty Air at Record Levels Is Putting Limits on Traffic The New York Times Retrieved 2015 12 31 Staff 2015 12 28 Come funzionano le limitazioni del traffico a Milano e a Roma How Traffic Restriction Works in Milan and Rome Internazionale it in Italian Retrieved 2015 12 31 a b Agence France Presse 2017 01 16 Oslo temporarily bans diesel cars to combat pollution The Guardian Retrieved 2017 01 25 a b Berglund Nina 2017 01 16 Diesel ban extended no fines issued yet News in English Norway Retrieved 2017 01 25 NTB AFP 2017 01 18 Oslo lifts temporary ban on diesel vehicles The Local Retrieved 2017 01 25 Stensrud Espen 2017 01 16 Dieselbilforbud det stinker av Diesel ban stinks Dinside no in Norwegian Retrieved 2017 01 25 Scott Sayare 2014 03 17 Fighting Pollution Paris Imposes Partial Driving Ban The New York Times Retrieved 2014 03 18 Agence France Presse 2014 03 17 Pollution circulation alternee lundi matin a Paris et dans la petite couronne Pollution traffic restriction on Monday morning in Paris and the inner suburbs Le Figaro in French Retrieved 2014 03 18 Michael Torregrossa 2014 03 17 Circulation alternee Les camions electriques bannis de la capitale Traffic restriction Electric trucks banned from the capital in French Association pour l Avenir du Vehicule Electrique Mediterraneen AVEM Retrieved 2014 03 18 Mayor of Paris 2014 03 17 Fin de la circulation alternee et des mesures antipollution End of alternating traffic and pollution control measures in French Mairie de Paris News Retrieved 2014 03 18 France to restrict vehicles use on Monday unless air pollution eases minister Xinhua News Agency GlobalPost 2015 03 20 Archived from the original on 2015 03 21 Retrieved 2015 03 22 Simon Blin 2015 01 21 Anne Hidalgo annonce la circulation alternee lundi a Paris Anne Hidalgo announced alternate traffic restriction on Monday in Paris Le Figaro in French Retrieved 2015 03 22 Staff 2015 03 22 Pollution a Paris qui est concerne par la circulation alternee lundi Pollution in Paris Who is affected by alternating traffic on Monday Le Monde in French Retrieved 2015 03 22 Paris connait le plus long et intense pic de pollution hivernal depuis dix ans Paris is experiencing the longest and most intense winter pollution spike in ten years Le Monde in French 2016 12 07 Retrieved 2016 12 25 Pollution circulation alternee reconduite jeudi a Paris instauree vendredi a Lyon et Villeurbanne Pollution alternating circulation renewed Thursday in Paris established Friday in Lyon and Villeurbanne Le Monde in French 2016 12 08 Retrieved 2016 12 25 Agence France Presse 2016 12 08 Pollution circulation alternee reconduite vendredi a Paris et en proche banlieue Pollution alternate circulation renewed Friday in Paris and near suburbs Le Huffington Post in French Archived from the original on 2016 12 09 Retrieved 2016 12 25 Pollution a Paris pas de circulation alternee ni ce lundi ni mardi Pollution in Paris no alternating traffic neither this Monday nor Tuesday Le Parisien in French 2016 12 11 Retrieved 2016 12 25 Paris Respire in French Retrieved 2016 12 12 Anzilotti Eillie 2016 04 29 Starting May 8 Sundays on the Champs Elysees Will Be a Car Free Experience CityLab Retrieved 2016 12 12 a b c Nida Najar 2015 12 04 Delhi to Limit Use of Cars in an Effort to Control Pollution The New York Times Retrieved 2015 12 05 a b Charles Riley 2016 01 01 Delhi residents give up cars to stop toxic air pollution CNNMoney Retrieved 2016 01 02 Have taken note of odd even formula of plying of vehicles Delhi Police Press Trust of India PTI Daily News and Analysis DNA India 2015 12 08 Retrieved 2015 12 09 a b c Maseeh Rahman 2015 12 31 Delhi driving restrictions in force from New Year s Day in bid to clear pollution The Guardian Retrieved 2016 01 01 Delhi govt s vehicle plan HC refuses to pass interim order on PIL Press Trust of India PTI The Indian Express 2015 12 09 Retrieved 2015 12 09 Nida Najar 2015 12 16 India choking on pollution Restricts Vehicle Use in Delhi The New York Times Retrieved 2015 12 19 Car restrictions begin in Beijing BBC News 2008 07 20 Retrieved 2008 07 25 Andrew Jacobs 2008 04 14 Traffic Beijing Stops Construction for Olympics New York Times Retrieved 2008 04 14 Lanl an W ang Ji nta o Xu Xinye Zheng amp Ping Qin September 2013 Will a Driving Restriction Policy Reduce Car Trips A Case Study of Beijing China PDF Environment for Development and Resources for the Future Archived from the original PDF on 2014 04 01 Retrieved 2013 10 07 Discussion Papers Series EfD DP 13 11 pp 7 8 Anita Chang 2008 07 21 Beijing has first workday under car restrictions The Washington Post Retrieved 2008 07 25 dead link Beijing to launch Olympic odd even car ban ABC news Reuters 2008 06 23 Retrieved 2008 06 23 Edward Cody 2007 08 11 Beijing To Test Plan to Cut Cars Measure Intended For 08 Olympics Washington Post Retrieved 2008 04 08 Pequim vai adotar rodizio de veiculos durante os Jogos in Portuguese Agencia Xinhua 2008 03 28 Retrieved 2008 04 08 permanent dead link Yuxuan Wang Michael B McElroy et al 2007 Traffic restrictions associated with the Sino African summit Reductions of NOx detected from space Geophysical Research Letters Vol 34 Retrieved 2008 04 08 a b Michael Wines 2009 10 16 Beijing s Air Is Cleaner but Far From Clean New York Times Retrieved 2009 10 17 Post Olympics Beijing car restrictions to take effect next month China View news 2008 09 28 Archived from the original on October 1 2008 Retrieved 2009 10 17 The great crawl The Economist 2016 06 18 Retrieved 2016 06 22 From the print edition The 2012 Olympic Games and the environment Mayor of London official website Archived from the original on 2008 01 17 Retrieved 2008 04 10 Car Free Travel London Olympic Organizers Hope to Reform Britain Spiegel ONLINE 2007 10 23 Retrieved 2008 04 10 London 2012 Olympics the first to be car free AutoBlogGreen 2007 10 31 Retrieved 2008 04 10 Tube carried 60m during Olympics BBC News 2012 08 13 Retrieved 2020 03 18 Victoria Transport Policy Institute Vehicle Restrictions Limiting Automobile Travel At Certain Times and Places TDM Encyclopedia Retrieved 2008 04 09 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help See Equity Impacts section Holtz Eakin Douglas 2003 05 06 Congestion Pricing for Highways Testimony before the Joint Economic Committee U S Congress Congressional Budget Office Archived from the original on 2008 02 14 Retrieved 2008 02 26 Verhoef E Nijkamp P Rietveld P 1997 Tradeable permits their potential in the regulation of road transport externalities Environment and Planning B Planning and Design 24 4 527 548 Bibcode 1997EnPlB 24 527V doi 10 1068 b240527 hdl 1871 16225 S2CID 153913288 Kara M Kockelman amp Sukumar Kalmanje 2005 Credit based congestion pricing a policy proposal and the public s response Transportation Research Part A Policy and Practice 39 7 9 671 690 doi 10 1016 j tra 2005 02 014 External links editOnline TDM Encyclopedia Vehicle restrictions The effect of transport policies on car use Evidence from Latin American cities Journal of Public Economics November 2013 Will a Driving Restriction Policy Reduce Car Trips A Case Study of Beijing China Environment for Development September 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Road space rationing amp oldid 1207988527, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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