1 / 11

Smart Ticketing: Reducing the barriers to Public Transport

Smart Ticketing: Reducing the barriers to Public Transport John Verity, Chief Advisor, ITSO Limited Chair, Smart Ticketing Alliance. What is Smart Ticketing?. Smart Transport Ticketing not just about payment but covers: Point-to-Point Tickets Period Passes Concessionary Travel

nyoko
Télécharger la présentation

Smart Ticketing: Reducing the barriers to Public Transport

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Smart Ticketing: Reducing the barriers to Public Transport John Verity, Chief Advisor, ITSO Limited Chair, Smart Ticketing Alliance

  2. What is Smart Ticketing? • Smart Transport Ticketing not just about payment but covers: • Point-to-Point Tickets • Period Passes • Concessionary Travel • Pay-on-Entry and Pay-as-you-Go • Specialised Ticketing (e.g. Apex, Reservations, Venues) • …and there to encourage integrated travel… • …and modal switching

  3. Public Transport Smart Ticketing Interoperability • Public Transport Smart Ticketing needs interoperability at three levels: • Local Schemes • National Schemes • International Schemes

  4. European Interoperability The main drivers for Public Transport are: • Social inclusion • Mobility • Harmonisation • Procurement • Scale economics … and support for the Green Agenda by removing barriers to modal switching

  5. Aim is to ensure cross-border interoperability of Transport Smart Ticketing is enabled across Europe Implement a EU-wide Road Map where: Customers use their chosen smart media (such as NFC smartphone) outside their home network Transport authorities build systems using a standardised tool-set, specifications and equipment Deliver the associated Trust Environment for Authority, Supplier and Customer alike Charter a way through Privacy Issues EU-IFM Project Aims

  6. Main goals of the Smart Ticketing Alliance • Cooperation between national and regional Smart Ticketing schemes to establish interoperable Smart Ticketing in Europe and elsewhere. • Develop, agree and publish the functional and technical requirements for smart ticketing interoperability • Cooperation for the establishment of Trust Schemes, Specifications and Certification • Cooperation with other European and International bodies to promote interoperability in Smart Ticketing

  7. Opportunities for smart ticketing in the wider environment: • Door-to-door travel integration • Full integration between bus and rail: making PlusBus really happen • Venue and Event integration with Public Transport • Integration with Car and Bike hire schemes • One-stop opportunities with NFC-enabled Mobile Phones • …

  8. Smart ticketing deliverables in the wider environment: • Seamless integration between Journey Planning, Retailing, Ticketing and Real Time Information • One smart access to Public Transport and wider Entitlements (e.g. integrated Student Cards) • Enhanced Modal Switching as part of a wider greening of transport

  9. ITSO Numbers • 5 major transport operators in Britain (Arriva, First, Go-Ahead, National Express and Stagecoach) all adopted ITSO • 6 train companies (East Midlands, First ScotRail, London Midland, Merseyrail, Southern Railway, and South West Trains) have implemented ITSO so far • Most other train companies to follow starting in 2014 under DfT South East Flexible Ticketing scheme • 120 members of ITSO, including local and national government, transport operators and equipment and consultancy suppliers • 1,000 different ticket types in the ITSO environment • More than 70,000 ITSO ticket machine in use on bus, rail and tram • 10 million ITSO-compliant smartcards in circulation in UK for concessionary and commercial journeys • 1.5 billion/yrestimated ITSO transactions (concessionary and commercial)

  10. Recent ITSO Member developments • In England, DfT continues to fund ITSO schemes on bus through LSTF, BSOG and BBAF grants. Big Five bus operators already smart, or committed to ITSO smart ticketing • The £45m investment in SEFT is a significant catalyst for Rail Operators • Increasing numbers of ITSO Members are delivering interoperable and commercial schemes, including NoWcard (Cumbria), POP (North East NESTI), South West (SWSAL), Centro, MCard (Yorkshire), Saltire (Scotland), GoCymru • Oxford’s SmartZone continues to set Best Practice in integration • Stagecoach “Smart” used on bus and train in Basingstoke; GoAhead “Key” used on bus, rail and car hire in Brighton; London ITSO soon. • Transport Scotland planning further development of the National Entitlement Card, commercial ticketing, and more fraud reduction through better hotlisting • All buses in Wales smart enabled with plans for national e-purse and train integration 10

  11. Thank you! For more information: E-mail john.verity@itso.org.uk Call on +44 1908 255 455 or visit www.itso.org.uk www.ifm-project.eu www.smart-ticketing.org 11

More Related