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Traffic congestion

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Traffic jams are common in heavily populated areas.
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Traffic jams are common in heavily populated areas.

Traffic congestion is a road condition characterized by slower speeds, longer trip times, and increased queueing. It occurs when roadway demand is greater than its capacity. A period of extreme traffic congestion is colloquially known as a traffic jam.

Traffic congestion has several negative effects:

Traffic engineers apply the rules of fluid dynamics to traffic flow, likening it to the flow of a fluid in a pipe. Traffic jam simulations have shown that in heavy but free flowing traffic, jams can arise spontaneosly, triggered by minor events such as an abrupt steering maneuver by a single motorist. Such a situation is likened to the freezing of supercooled fluid by traffic scientistsCritical Mass, Philip Ball, ISBN 0099457865.

Congested roads can be an example of the tragedy of the commons. Because roads in most places are free at the point of usage, there is little financial incentive for drivers not to over-utilize them, up to the point where traffic collapses into a jam, where demand is limited by opportunity cost. Privatization of highways and road pricing are measures that can prevent recurring congestion through economic incentives. Congestion can also happen due to non-recurring highway incidents, such as a crash or construction, which may reduce the road's capacity below normal levels.

Economist Anthony Downs, in his books Stuck in Traffic (1992) and Still Stuck in Traffic (2004), offers a dissenting view: rush hour traffic congestion is inevitable because of the benefits of having a relatively standard work day. In a market economy, goods can be allocated either by pricing (ability to pay) or by queueing (first-come first-serve); congestion is an example of the latter. Instead of the traffic engineer's solution of making a "pipe" large enough to accommodate the total demand for peak-hour vehicle travel, either by widening roadways or increasing "flow pressure" via automated highway systems, Downs advocates greater use of road pricing to reduce congestion, in turn plowing the revenues generated therefrom into public transportation projects.

New evidence is emerging that building more freeways increases traffic congestion (see induced demand hypothesis). The logic being that with extra road capacity, more cars will use the road at any one time and as a result more traffic congestion will arise. It has also been likened to an obese person loosening their belt as a cure for obesity. Public Transport advocates argue that people still need to get from a to b and by adding more roads, it will inevitably create gridlock because more people will use the roads.

Traffic congestion in the United States

On Fridays in California, Interstate 5 is often congested as Los Angeles residents travel north for the weekend
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On Fridays in California, Interstate 5 is often congested as Los Angeles residents travel north for the weekend

In the United States, construction of new highway capacity has not kept pace with increases in population and car use and the resulting increase in demand for highway travel. Between 1980 and 1999, the total length of highways as measured by miles increased by only 1.5 percent, while the total number of miles of vehicle travel increased by 76 percent.

The Texas Transportation Institute estimates that in 2000 the 75 largest metropolitan areas experienced 3.6 billion vehicle-hours of delay, resulting in 5.7 billion US gallons (21.6 billion liters) in wasted fuel and $67.5 billion in lost productivity, or about 0.7% of the nation's GDP. It also estimates that the annual cost of congestion for each driver is approximately $1,000 in very large cities and $200 in small cities. Traffic congestion is increasing in major cities, and delays are becoming more frequent in smaller cities and rural areas.

The five areas in the United States with the highest levels of traffic congestion in order are: [link]

Due to dramatic population increases, San Diego and Las Vegas have seen their congestion levels increase by more than 50 percent since 1982.

Classification

The U.S. Department of Transportation uses the following scale, based on lane occupancy, to classify traffic congestion:

Attempts to alleviate traffic congestion

Traffic jam because of road accident, Algarve, Portugal
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Traffic jam because of road accident, Algarve, Portugal

References

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

External links

 


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