Ho Chi Minh City is preparing to allocate around VND7 trillion (US$280 million) annually to make bus travel free across the city, with authorities aiming to finalize the policy by late April.
Nah, its literally just the cars. You can fit like 10 bikes and even more bicycles in the space of 1 car. That means you don’t need super wide roads, a quarter of your city destroyed to build parking lots, even traffic signaling can be removed if traffic is slow enough since bikes just go around pedestrians.
Fair, I was thinking specifically of fossil fuel bikes (which are unsustainable and afaik make up the vast majority of motorbikes in Vietnam). You will still need signals for public transport which will be necessary for the foreseeable future.
None at all, I support this, I just want them to do something about all the cars. They’re a danger both on an individual and societal level.
Free public transport is one of the best positive ways to take cars off the road, I would imagine (although we need to be looking at negative ways, too - preferably not based on extra cost, but at this point it just needs to happen no matter what).
Free public transport is one of the best positive ways to take cars off the road, I would imagine (although we need to be looking at negative ways, too - preferably not based on extra cost, but at this point it just needs to happen no matter what).
People paying to own a car in Vietnam aren’t concerned with practicality and cost as much as status, especially if it’s an import. The average 110cc Honda Wave carries more stuff than the average Ford Ranger and gets there faster. Sadly those same people have disproportionate influence on government policy because money. These are the kind of petty bourgeosie who block adding a bus lane to super-wide roads because it doesn’t serve them personally. The only way to take cars off the road in vietnam is to ban them or make them too expensive.
Fair, I was thinking specifically of fossil fuel bikes (which are unsustainable and afaik make up the vast majority of motorbikes in Vietnam). You will still need signals for public transport which will be necessary for the foreseeable future.
Yeah, displacing ICE bikes with electrics is its own battle. It’s astonishing they’ve made any progress at all given how difficult it is to get any major infrastructure project done in the cities and how mismanaged Vinfast Group is.
I’ll be back over there when the ICE bike ban in Hanoi kicks in in a couple months , it’ll be interesting to see if we get more electrics, bicycles, and bus ridership, or if people switch to cars, which aren’t being restricted until next year instead.
Fair, I was thinking specifically of fossil fuel bikes (which are unsustainable and afaik make up the vast majority of motorbikes in Vietnam). You will still need signals for public transport which will be necessary for the foreseeable future.
Free public transport is one of the best positive ways to take cars off the road, I would imagine (although we need to be looking at negative ways, too - preferably not based on extra cost, but at this point it just needs to happen no matter what).
People paying to own a car in Vietnam aren’t concerned with practicality and cost as much as status, especially if it’s an import. The average 110cc Honda Wave carries more stuff than the average Ford Ranger and gets there faster. Sadly those same people have disproportionate influence on government policy because money. These are the kind of petty bourgeosie who block adding a bus lane to super-wide roads because it doesn’t serve them personally. The only way to take cars off the road in vietnam is to ban them or make them too expensive.
Yeah, displacing ICE bikes with electrics is its own battle. It’s astonishing they’ve made any progress at all given how difficult it is to get any major infrastructure project done in the cities and how mismanaged Vinfast Group is.
I’ll be back over there when the ICE bike ban in Hanoi kicks in in a couple months , it’ll be interesting to see if we get more electrics, bicycles, and bus ridership, or if people switch to cars, which aren’t being restricted until next year instead.