Bangkok’s Mass Transit System

Saturday, May 30, 2009 11:58
Posted in category Current Affairs, Thailand

On Friday 29th May, 2009 the Bangkok Post produced a Property Focus supplement. One of the items featured was an overview of the Mass Transit System compared with that of other major cities, as well as a listing of planned lines and lines under study.

Typically, it was just a listing of data with little analysis. The data presented, which I have not verified, was;

Table 1. Raw Data

  Population  Area   MRT Length  no. of Stations  Daily 
  millions  sq. km.   km.  lines    Ridership 
Bangkok         6.50     1,569                44 2 41       640,000
Manila       14.75     1,399                46 3 42       850,000
Singapore         4.00        479              110 3 64    1,564,000
Tokyo(subway)       12.79     2,187              329 14 293    8,000,000
Greater Tokyo       33.47     8,304            2,578 136 1200  20,000,000
Seoul       10.42        605              287 10 266    8,000,000
Beijing         8.61        748              200 8 123    3,400,000
Athens         3.69        684                73 3 52    1,150,000
Paris         9.65     2,723              214 16 300    4,500,000
London         8.28     1,623              400 11 268    4,250,000
Madrid         4.90        945              283 13 231    2,090,000
Munich         1.60        518                93 6 94       904,110
Moscow       10.50     2,150              292 12 177    6,800,000
New York         8.30     1,214              368 26 468    6,432,700

A nice assortment of data, much of which is not truly relevant to assessing how adequate a Mass Transit System is.

I’m no expert on Mass Transit Systems, but you do not need to be one to exercise simple logic and assess and compare Mass Transit Systems. As I am not an expert, I cannot provide you with the typical buzzwords, only simple English.

Line Density

A good Mass Transit System has to be easily and conveniently accessible to the people in order for it to be useful.

One of the main criteria I use in assessing the adequacy of a Mass Transit System is density of lines, or in simple terms, how many square kilometers of city area are served by a kilometer of line. This metric will give an indication of relative distance the population has to travel to get to the system, and penetration or coverage of the system.

In the case of Bangkok, even before looking at the number, anyone familiar with the system here will know that it is hopelessly inadequate. Vast swathes of the city are nowhere near a Mass Transit line.

Forget the suburbs; yesterday I was in the Pratunam area of New Petchburi road where the traffic is a nightmare any day of the week. Looking around at the condominium and apartment complexes, I wondered why people would choose to live there. Crowded, polluted, grubby looking, traffic snarls as soon as you step out onto the road and a long sticky walk in Bangkok’s heat and humidity to get to the nearest Mass Transit station.

But the metric is telling as you can see below;

Table 2. Square kilometers per kilometer of line.  

 

 Area per

 

 km. lines

 

 (sq. km./km.)

Seoul

          2.11

Greater Tokyo

          3.22

New York

          3.30

Madrid

          3.34

Beijing

          3.74

London

          4.06

Singapore

          4.35

Munich

          5.57

Tokyo(subway)

          6.65

Moscow

          7.36

Athens

          9.37

Paris

        12.72

Manila

        30.41

Bangkok

        35.66

Bangkok ranks bottom of the list, with 35.66 square kilometers per kilometer of line. Of the 14 cities featured, the top 7 have less than 5 square kilometers to each kilometer of line, with Seoul best at 2.11 square kilometers for each kilometer of line.

Population Size and Density

Population Size itself is not a critical factor in assessing how useful an existing system is, though it obviously points to the need for one.

Population density expressed in people per square kilometer is only truly useful if evaluated in the context of carrying capacity provided by the service, rather like seat-miles in air travel (how many seats for how many miles). The greater the population density, the greater the carrying capacity required.

That data was not provided, so I will simply note that capacity-kilometers is easily increased by adding more carriages to trains and running trains at a higher frequency. For example, the BTS in Bangkok can easily be run with 5 carriages per train as designed, rather than the current 3, and service could just as easily be run at a frequency of 2½ minutes, rather than the 5 that is typical currently. This simple move would increase carrying capacity to 330%.

Nevertheless, if we look at the number in relation to population density and average number of people served by each station, it provides more insight in comparing the systems.

Table 3. Population Density

 

 Population

Population

 

Density

per Station

 

(pop/sq. km.)

 

Seoul

       17,223

     39,173

Beijing

       11,511

     70,000

Manila

       10,543

   351,190

Singapore

        8,351

     62,500

New York

        6,837

     17,735

Tokyo(subway)

        5,848

     43,652

Athens

        5,395

     70,962

Madrid

        5,185

     21,212

London

        5,102

     30,896

Moscow

        4,884

     59,322

Bangkok

        4,143

   158,537

Greater Tokyo

        4,031

     27,892

Paris

        3,544

     32,167

Munich

        3,089

     17,021

The table is sorted in descending order of population density. If 2 cities have equal penetration of mass transit lines, expressed in square kilometers per kilometer of line, the city with the higher population density would have more people to serve at each station and with each kilometer of line.

Interestingly, Seoul with the highest population density only caters to 39,173 people per station, Manila with the third highest population density caters to 351,190 per station and Singapore which is 4th in density 62,500 per station. Bangkok, which lies 11th in population density has the 2nd highest number of people per station at 158,537.

What Needs to Be Done?

The simple answer is to provide more lines and better coverage so that the populace is truly served by the Mass Transit System.

The same article highlighted that a total of 186.9 kilometers of additional lines are either planned or being studied. If completed, that would take Bangkok to 6.80 square kilometers per kilometer of line, 10th in the table on current numbers.

The article is also long on excuses for the late provision of services. The Mass Transit Master Plan was conceived in 1994, and todate we are well behind anything in that plan, a third version of which goes before the cabinet in July 2009. The plan has a completion date of 2028.

In comparison, in 1967 Singapore city planners identified a need for a Mass Transit System to be in place by 1992. Work began in October 1983 and the first section of the MRT started operation in November 1987, with an official launch in March 1988.

What really needs to be done then is to put a world class political leadership in place. Everything else follows from there.

Malaysia - Independence, But Not Freedom

Wednesday, May 20, 2009 14:11

Two Malaysian Opposition politicians were arrested for participating in a candlelight vigil calling for the dissolution of the Perak State Assembly.

They were part of a gathering of more than a dozen people, and they did not have a police permit making it an illegal gathering.

A peaceful vigil of a dozen or so and they get arrested? Talk about using a sledgehammer to kill an ant, they really need to grow up over there. I am not in favour of airport occupations or the sort of unruly behaviour on the part of the red shirts in Thailand, but the Malaysian protest was so harmless that it is ludicrous that anyone would be arrested.

It can only stem from a belief that the people are a bunch of unruly beasts who have to be kept in check. Hardly ‘government of the people, by the people, for the people’.

Fifty-one years of Independence, but not freedom. Perhaps in another fifty years.

Note: The Perak State Assembly is at the heart of a Constitutional Crisis in that state and the issue is before the courts. I have suggested the dissolution of the assembly as the best way out of the impasse and mine is far from being the only call.

Not Lese Majeste Then, Simple Obscenity

Wednesday, May 20, 2009 13:39
Posted in category Current Affairs, Malaysia

The Star Online (Malaysia) reported today that a couple in Penang have been charged with spreading an obscene comment on the Sultan of Perak by publishing it on a website.

They have been charged under Section 292 (a) of the Penal Code, which carries a jail sentence of up to three years or a fine or both. This section deals with the production, distribution, circulation etc of obscene materials, and would cover pornography and a whole range of similar matters.

They face an alternative charge of posting the obscene remark on the Internet with an intention to hurt other people’s feelings, an offence, under Section 233 (3) of the Communications and Multimedia Act 1998 (Act 588), which carries a jail sentence of up to five years or a fine of up to RM50,000.

Pretty stiff for obscenity, but that is the law in Malaysia.

In a recent post Malaysia to Step Up Policing of Internet I commented on the tendency of many Malaysian blogs to be laden with expletives, expecially in the comments.

I’m not sure whether it is because many people there are unable to express their ideas coherently without resorting to expletives, or whether it is a cultural thing as in hip, savvy people swear. Whatever, I am highly selective about which blogs I visit as I prefer to read intelligent stuff - juveniles swear, adults reason.

The Sultan of Perak is at the centre of a Constitutional Crisis in his state, as I covered in Perak and Malaysia - Democracy Rising.

In Malaysia it is not an offence to criticise the Sultans or rulers, but this should be done in a reasoned manner otherwise it does lay one open to being charged with other offences.

South Africa Reverses Decision to Deny Dalai Lama Visa

Friday, May 15, 2009 18:12

It has not taken long for Jacob Zuma to put his stamp on things.

In a reversal of a decision in March 2009, the new International Relations Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane has announced that the Dalai Lama is free to visit whenever he wants.

Back then, the Dalai Lama was scheduled to attend an International Peace Conference for Noble Laureates. South Africa’s visa ban (due to pressure from China) prompted Archbishop Desmond Tutu and former South African President FW de Klerk to pull out of the conference, forcing organisers to postpone it indefinitely. Read the rest of this entry »

Electronics Giants Post Massive Losses

Friday, May 15, 2009 17:42

Sony

Sony announced a loss of $1 billion for the Financial Year ended 31st March, 2009. This came on the back of a $1.72 billion loss in the last quarter alone, wiping out the $720 million profit it had made in the first three quarters.

This was the first loss in 14 years and is attributed to poor sales of its Electronics goods, unlike the previous loss which was caused by a one-time charge to its US Film Studios business.

Sales fell in all key markets: down 20 percent in the U.S., 17 percent in Europe and 14 percent in Japan. Read the rest of this entry »