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Calculating the Cost of Road Wear on Local Roads

Calculating the Cost of Road Wear on Local Roads. Mark Bondietti Riaan Burger. October 2013. Contents. Background Methods Marginal Costs Catalogue Method Case Study FAMLIT Future Work. Background. Local Governments seek mechanisms to quantify cost of road wear

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Calculating the Cost of Road Wear on Local Roads

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  1. Calculating the Cost of Road Wear on Local Roads Mark Bondietti Riaan Burger October 2013

  2. Contents • Background • Methods • Marginal Costs • Catalogue Method • Case Study • FAMLIT • Future Work

  3. Background • Local Governments seek mechanisms to quantify cost of road wear • Impact of road wear much higher on local roads • Various methods have been tried – too expensive, specialised skills. • Seek simple method

  4. Methods for Evaluating the Cost of Road Wear • Routine Maintenance Determination • Evidence Based Reporting • Pavement Design Approach • Single Marginal Cost • Catalogue of Marginal Costs

  5. MRWA Policy • For vehicles operating 23.5 t triaxles the charge will be 0.4 cents per tonne per kilometre of payload (over and above the initial 300,000 tonne per annum). • For alternative mass limits the charge will be determined on the basis of 5.5c per additional ESA.km • Is this sufficient for Local Roads?

  6. Road Wear Cost – Farm or Mine to Port Minor Local Road Regional Local Road Minor Main Road Price Charged Price required for cost recovery Major Main Road Urban Highway or Freeway State Rural Highway Port Farm Journey from Farm or Mine to Port

  7. Calculating the Cost of Road Wear on Local Roads

  8. Calculation Example: Yalgoo – Ningham Road • Quad Road Train • Concessional Load – 23.5t per triaxle • 58.1 km task • 1 400 000 tonne/ annum • Sealed Rural Collector / Arterial Road • ESA / payload tonne = 0.18 Therefore 1.4 m tonne = 252 000 ESA • For rural collector 30c / SAR km For Arterial = 5c / SARkm(Austroads) Using 7c: Therefore cost = 252000 x 58.1 x 0.07 = $1 024 884 per annum

  9. FAMLIT • Quick description • Background • Model description • Results of pilot study for WALGA

  10. FAMLIT Background • FAMLIT is a sealed pavement life-cycle costing analysis tool (Austroads project AT1165) • Other similar tools are: • HDM-4 • PLATO • FAMLIT was used in Austroads project AT 1394 due to its relatively simple input data requirements “Preliminary methodology for estimating cost implications of incremental loads on road pavements”

  11. FAMLIT Description • Life cycle costs are calculated over a 50-year analysis period • Routine and periodic maintenance costs are combined in a constant annual value for a given traffic load • Structural works are triggered based on condition • FAMLIT implementation used two models for triggering structural works: • Rutting/roughness model • Pavement strength model • Model parameters/coefficients are similar to those used in the ROMAN II dTIMS set-up

  12. FAMLIT Results • Traffic is applied to pavement and condition modelled over time • Routine and periodic treatments are constant costs over analysis period • When condition triggers, structural work costs are calculated and condition reset to pre-determined levels • Total cost for each loading scenario is converted to Equivalent Annual Uniform Cost (EAUC) • For each pavement/climate scenario the EAUCs for the different load scenarios are plotted and a straight line fitted • Marginal Cost is the slope of the line

  13. Future Work • Refine input data • Divide state into regions • Obtain unit rates applicable to regions • Refine pavement strength model • Refine pavement types and composition for regions • Produce simple to use tool for Local Governments • Form baseline of discussion regarding compensation with industry operators

  14. Questions

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