Bus revolution to put power in passengers' hands
Funding for platform enabling app developers to utilise location information about buses.
Rural bus services could be overhauled thanks to a new digital system pioneered by the government.
Buses Minister Nusrat Ghani has today (26 March 2019) announced £4 million for a platform which will provide location information about services – giving greater certainty to passengers about when their bus will arrive.
The platform enables app developers to use information from GPS trackers, which are already fitted to 97% of buses. This will provide a service which is available in some major cities. It will give people in other areas across the country, including rural and remote areas, the ability to plan journeys more easily.
Research shows that one of the barriers to young people using buses is not having information readily available on their phones but with fares and times at their fingertips, this will cut the uncertainty out of bus travel.
The drive towards improved and open data for bus services across England is the first step in cutting the barriers to introducing mobility-as-a-service, one-stop-ticketing products and applications, in a bid to increase usage.
Buses Minister Nusrat Ghani said:
People expect to turn up to a bus stop knowing when their next service will arrive, particularly in rural areas.
We’re investing in systems to make it easier for people to find out where their bus is, how much it will cost and how long it will take.
This will save the time people waste waiting, give more people certainty over services and help increase passenger numbers.
It could help revolutionise bus travel and move us one step closer to mobility-as-a-service and on-demand public transport systems.
On-demand bus travel is already available in Liverpool, run by ArrivaClick. Routes are not fixed, but are determined by where passengers want to go within a corridor - in Liverpool, 6 luxury 15-seat buses take people in an area between the city centre and John Lennon Airport. These services are driven by high quality data and computer-based algorithms.
The funding announced today builds on the recently published Future of mobility urban strategy, which looks at how people will use transport in the future and how new technology can make journeys better.
The government is also investing in ways to speed up bus journeys. As part of the first tranche of the £2.5 billion Transforming Cities Fund, Derby and Nottingham, the North East, Portsmouth and Southampton will see the deployment of bus priority traffic lights to speed up trips to the city centres.
This will help unlock productivity and help the economies in these areas to thrive.
The bus open data regulations are being implemented as part of the Bus Services Act, which gives local authorities additional powers to partner with bus operators and shape services in their areas to deliver improvements to passengers.
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