MillenniumPost
Opinion

Delhi needs buses in off-peak hours too

This week, I was informed that the National Green Tribunal (NGT) had issued a public criticism to the Delhi Transport Corporation (DTC) for running their buses, especially the red AC buses, “empty” during the afternoon hours. The National Green Tribunal (NGT) criticised the DTC for running “empty” buses for “at least five hours per day,” “causing pollution,” improper route planning, and not designing buses to ensure that the bus driver would not be injured if the bus were to be in an accident. The story was reported by the Press Trust of India and picked up by several <g data-gr-id="123">news groups</g> who used headlines like “National Green Tribunal slams DTC.”

None of these news sources reacted in the same way I did: incredulous. This is a reflection of a total lack of understanding of public transportation, especially buses, at the upper levels of policy making in this government. Beyond policy makers, these comments reflect a lack of understanding of public buses on those who do not use them. This is important and disappointing because their insane musings have been re-packaged verbatim into <g data-gr-id="117">news</g> and thus the sole official viewpoint distributed to the public.

What “lean hours”? Though peak hours are undoubtedly characterised by terrible traffic congestion, I doubt that any Delhi commuter would say that traffic moves with ease at any normal travel time. I take a lot of buses in the early afternoon, and I’ve never felt that a bus was not crowded enough. To test this theory, I counted the passengers throughout my daily trip between Pant Nagar and Hamdard Nagar/Sangam Vihar this week on the 445A (orange or cluster bus).

I used NextBus Delhi, a mobile application created by Delhi Integrated Multi-Modal Transit System (DIMTS), to learn more about my route. I learned that the trip between Pant Nagar and Hamdard Nagar measures 10.1 kilometres, therefore putting the trip’s cost just past the <g data-gr-id="138">10 kilometre</g> threshold, the cost would be Rs. 15 instead of Rs 10. Very clever! The application estimates that my trip should take approximately 34 minutes to travel said 10.1 kilometres, an average speed of 17.8 kilometres per hour. Instead, my afternoon trip took 47 minutes of bus travel time (in addition to walking to and from the bus stops and waiting time). The average bus speed during the trip was 12.9 kilometres/hour. Ask anyone: bus user or Delhi driver: there are no “lean” hours.

Delhi traffic is predictable only in its slow speeds. This trip, when a bus trip took significantly longer than the operator’s own estimate, is a proof that Delhi has not made a way for buses to move easily through the cities. Trapped in traffic, buses move along their routes slower, passengers wait longer at stops and inside the bus, and the bus becomes less reliable as a means of punctual transportation for consumers. Providing the road infrastructure for fast travel on buses is a key element to making buses attractive methods of transportation.

Perhaps the members of the National Green Tribunal meant not that lean hours are when lower levels of traffic congestion are experienced in Delhi, but when buses are less full. Again, I believe there is no such thing. I boarded the bus on a Wednesday when there were 14 passengers on the bus. A number of passengers inside the bus climbed throughout the route. The seats were all occupied after Paras Cinema, about seven stops later, as the bus drove down Guru Ravi Das Marg, there were 18 people standing. When the bus arrived at its final stop shortly <g data-gr-id="119">afterward</g>, nearly every seat was still occupied.

I can practically guarantee you that the density of a bus, even a bus with few passengers, is greater than the passenger density of the surrounding cars. A recent study by the Centre for Science and Environment found that in <g data-gr-id="149">neighbourhood</g> of Alaknanda in south Delhi, 84 <g data-gr-id="151">per cent</g> of cars travelling to the marketplace were occupied by just a single passenger. The most popular selling sedan in India is the Swift Dzire, which takes up an area of 6.52 square metres. The area of a standard low-floor bus is 31.2 square metres. Approximately five passengers are needed inside a bus for the passenger density to equal a sedan with a single passenger. (This excludes the conductor and the bus driver.)
At what point does the NGT feel that a bus is properly stuffed? An orange bus has 39 seats, one of which is nearly always occupied by a conductor. A green or red bus has fewer seats, since the area around the rear door is seat-less, allowing crowds to congregate, or for a wheelchair to be placed.

Though to my knowledge this possibility has not been tested, I believe that the NGT panel’s suggestion that the DTC switches to smaller buses during off-peak hours is not a rational suggestion. <g data-gr-id="124">Of course</g> its practicality is based on the—I believe false—belief that buses are not full enough. Increasing bus service through smaller bus vehicles may be worth investigating in areas more on the borders of Delhi or in areas with less bus traffic or for Metro feeder service. But it seems extremely impractical for buses to switch to smaller vehicles during the day. Interestingly enough, my bus route is through south Delhi, where bus ridership is the lowest in numbers (5.02 lakh daily), among the geographic regions distinguished by the DTC.

The NGT has a point that bus maintenance is inadequate. According to official DTC operational data, the number of breakdowns per 10,000 kilometres has increased from 0.67 in 2005-2006 to 5.35 in 2014-2015, with most of the growth in breakdowns coming in the last four years. Though this may be indicative of an <g data-gr-id="112">aging</g> fleet, such a large number of breakdowns is disruptive to the service.

In April 2015, the size of the DTC bus fleet was 4,705 buses, with the majority of buses being non-AC low floor buses. Of these, less than 5,000 buses, the total fleet utilisation was 85.29 <g data-gr-id="98">per cent</g>. Breakdowns are not only occurring much more frequently than they have in years past, they are occurring very often per vehicle. Breakdown data was not available for the NCR bus service or DIMTS’s cluster buses.

Breakdowns are occurring at astoundingly often rates, not just per kilometre, but per bus. I should emphasise that my calculations on breakdowns per bus are done for the total size of the fleet, whereas the utilisation ratios. The NGT sees this as an example of improper maintenance. So tellingly, their collective words are: “Have you ever seen a single bus which does not make <g data-gr-id="129">horrible</g> noise. Their noise is annoying. If anyone is behind that bus he will get mad within no time.” Behind the bus, as in, the noise of the bus is only an inconvenience to the people not in the bus, outside the bus—what about the people inside the bus? Does the noise not bother them too?

Delhi’s ageing buses
Many in Delhi have been pushing for the government to buy new buses. This is not just because the number of buses needed to serve the population is low, but the fleet is ageing. Standard floor buses were supposed to have been completely phased out with the purchase of low-floor buses, but these vehicles still comprise almost a fifth of the DTC bus fleet. Buses are considered “over-aged” at the age of eight years. Currently, one in five buses in Delhi is overaged, nearly all of those buses older than 10 years. There is another problem on the horizon; 14 per cent of Delhi’s buses are six to eight years old, indicating that they will be considered <g data-gr-id="104">overaged</g> very <g data-gr-id="140">shortly,</g> and that the time to buy new buses is indeed now.

Perhaps this public reprimand to the Delhi Transport Corporation is the beginning of a series of NGT criticisms to all vehicles in the city. Thus, by altering their comments from this week, I have prepared a statement for drivers of private vehicles:

“Unfortunately, we also live in Delhi. Your huge cars lie parked, empty, for at least five hours a day. Have you rationalised on this aspect? It is shocking that nobody listens. We are thinking about afternoon when most of your AC cars are empty. At peak hours, they are not full to capacity. You are wasting government revenue through fuel subsidies, particularly for diesel, creating traffic chaos and causing environmental pollution. Have you ever seen a single car which does not make <g data-gr-id="136">horrible</g> noise when its driver is honking? Their noise is annoying. If anyone is walking or riding a bicycle by that <g data-gr-id="133">car</g> he will get mad within no time.”

( Down to Earth)

Next Story
Share it