Mobility as a Service (MaaS)
is a broad term for a range of digital transport service platforms,
from quite niche online car and bike-sharing schemes to hugely
popular, high profile taxi and private hire smartphone
apps.
MaaS apps
can provide value for money, convenient, on demand services and
are transforming how people, particularly younger people in
cities, use urban transport. But, while door-to-door journeys in
cities tend to utilise several transport modes—
walk/cycle/minicab; train; bus; walk/cycle, for example—the most
popular smartphone apps to date have tended to be single mode,
typically taxis and minicabs.
Proponents of an
emerging model of MaaS,
in which multiple modes of transport are
brought together under a single app, believe it has the potential
to make getting around via public and shared transport so
convenient it will negate the need for people in and around
cities to own their own car, with potentially massive benefits in
relation to urban congestion, air pollution and
health.
The Transport
Committee is launching a new inquiry into the transformative
potential of this type of integrated,
multi-mode MaaS app,
and overcoming barriers to implementation in UK cities and
regions.
, Chair of the Transport
Select Committee, said:
“Integrating
urban transport modes into a single,
integrated MaaS app
represents a really exciting opportunity to transform how we get
around in our cities.
“An
integrated MaaS app
can create a single, seamless journey, cutting out the hassle of
separate ticketing for different legs of a journey. The app can
plan and book your whole journey from door-to-door in the most
efficient way possible, using real-time service data across all
the transport modes in the city. This could substantially reduce
reliance on the private car; ease congestion; increase
productivity; and lead to more pleasant, healthier cities with
better air quality.
“Integrated MaaS is
a much talked about concept, but it is not generally well
understood. We want to increase public understanding; find out if
the bold claims are justified; and, if they are, recommend ways
the Department for Transport and others can support and
facilitate its implementation in the
UK."
Call for
written evidence
The
Transport Committee calls for written evidence addressing one or
more of the following terms of
reference:
· Global
evidence to date on the
effectiveness of integrated,
multi-mode MaaS apps
in relation to:
o boosting the
efficiency of urban public transport systems;
and
o managing demand for
road use in cities; reducing road congestion; and improving air
quality;
· Overcoming
the barriers to implementation of integrated,
multi-mode MaaS apps
in UK cities, including:
o current powers,
capabilities and resources of local and regional transport
authorities;
o current commissioning
models, including the rail franchising system;
and
o transport providers'
unwillingness to share data, customers and revenue (including car
hire companies; innovators in autonomous vehicles; rail, metro,
and bus operators; cycle hire schemes; car clubs; and
others);
· The
role of central government, particularly the
Department for Transport, in raising awareness, building the
evidence base, and harnessing the potential
of MaaS;
and
· Overcoming
concerns about digital
exclusion, ensuring mobility
remains accessible to all.
The
Transport Committee would be grateful to receive written
submissions, by Friday 22 December
2017.
Submissions can be
made via the Committee’s Mobility as a
Service evidence
portal.