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Impact of delays on passenger train services: evidence from Great Britain

Impact of delays on passenger train services: evidence from Great Britain
Impact of delays on passenger train services: evidence from Great Britain
The impact of delays on passenger railways, with specific reference to the national rail network in Great Britain, is examined. A key distinction is made between punctuality (trains running late) and reliability (trains canceled). In Britain these have been combined into a public performance measure, which deteriorated markedly as a consequence of the Hatfield accident in 2000 but has since gradually improved. Causes of delay can be associated with train operators, infrastructure authorities, and external factors. In Great Britain, train operators apparently have been better able to manage delay than the infrastructure authority.
Traditional means of valuing delay have used stated preference methods that incorporate a measure of mean lateness and have shown that a minute of late time is typically valued as equivalent to 3 min of timetabled journey time. This is referred to as the reliability multiplier. Studies have also focused on the value placed on the standard deviation of journey time and compare this valuation against that of mean journey time to produce the reliability ratio. The most recent work finds that the reliability ratio may be higher than previously thought, whereas the reliability multiplier may be lower than previously thought, especially for long journeys. In addition, recent work that has made use of revealed preference data to infer elasticities of demand with respect to delays indicates that most market segments are relatively insensitive to delays. In total, this recent work suggests that passengers in Britain may be becoming less sensitive to reliability, and reasons for this are examined.
0361-1981
14-23
Preston, John
ef81c42e-c896-4768-92d1-052662037f0b
Wall, Graham
1f68f5b7-d1a9-4daf-9440-e7cf49f33606
Batley, Richard
2f883f62-9457-4add-933d-1cd315441b3f
Ibanez, Nicolas
2e176191-fbc0-41ca-bc81-a04d30da01f1
Shires, Jeremy
dd9dda30-97b2-4d2b-aa70-237e0894766d
Preston, John
ef81c42e-c896-4768-92d1-052662037f0b
Wall, Graham
1f68f5b7-d1a9-4daf-9440-e7cf49f33606
Batley, Richard
2f883f62-9457-4add-933d-1cd315441b3f
Ibanez, Nicolas
2e176191-fbc0-41ca-bc81-a04d30da01f1
Shires, Jeremy
dd9dda30-97b2-4d2b-aa70-237e0894766d

Preston, John, Wall, Graham, Batley, Richard, Ibanez, Nicolas and Shires, Jeremy (2009) Impact of delays on passenger train services: evidence from Great Britain. Transportation Research Record, 2117, 14-23. (doi:10.3141/2117-03).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The impact of delays on passenger railways, with specific reference to the national rail network in Great Britain, is examined. A key distinction is made between punctuality (trains running late) and reliability (trains canceled). In Britain these have been combined into a public performance measure, which deteriorated markedly as a consequence of the Hatfield accident in 2000 but has since gradually improved. Causes of delay can be associated with train operators, infrastructure authorities, and external factors. In Great Britain, train operators apparently have been better able to manage delay than the infrastructure authority.
Traditional means of valuing delay have used stated preference methods that incorporate a measure of mean lateness and have shown that a minute of late time is typically valued as equivalent to 3 min of timetabled journey time. This is referred to as the reliability multiplier. Studies have also focused on the value placed on the standard deviation of journey time and compare this valuation against that of mean journey time to produce the reliability ratio. The most recent work finds that the reliability ratio may be higher than previously thought, whereas the reliability multiplier may be lower than previously thought, especially for long journeys. In addition, recent work that has made use of revealed preference data to infer elasticities of demand with respect to delays indicates that most market segments are relatively insensitive to delays. In total, this recent work suggests that passengers in Britain may be becoming less sensitive to reliability, and reasons for this are examined.

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Published date: 2009

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 76064
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/76064
ISSN: 0361-1981
PURE UUID: 9c2caa10-ddea-47b8-8a09-4f3546dff65e
ORCID for John Preston: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6866-049X

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Date deposited: 12 Mar 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:51

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Contributors

Author: John Preston ORCID iD
Author: Graham Wall
Author: Richard Batley
Author: Nicolas Ibanez
Author: Jeremy Shires

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