On The Wrong Track?
WAITING FOR THE BUS...
Will Karachiites ever get an efficient public transport system ?
Khalid, a commuter, travels regularly on his bike from Orangi Town to I.I. Chundrigar Road. He would prefer to travel on public transport but has little choice. “The services are atrocious. The monopoly of the bus drivers is so powerful that they can stop the bus wherever they want and ask you to get off. If the route isn’t profitable for them, they don’t take passengers on. Sometimes you have to change buses several times just because the driver doesn’t want to go any further,” he complains.
But the one thing that keeps Khalid hopeful is the possibility of an improved mass transit in the city — the Green Line, a bus transit system initiated in 2014 by the Nawaz Sharif government.
“With the Green Line, people will travel with comfort and respect. They will get on the bus and know that they will reach their destination in time without worrying about traffic or anything,” says the commuter.
Another commuter, Manzar, says people would prefer to travel in a more safe and comfortable way. “People who travel on the roofs of buses will definitely benefit from a proper bus line,” he says.
Shaky beginnings
All, however, is not rosy about the new proposed transit system. One of six Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) corridors proposed under the Transport Master Plan of 2005 prepared for the Karachi City District (CDGK) Government by the Japan International Corporation Agency (JICA), the Green Line is now projected to cost around 20-27 billion rupees — 11-16 billion more than the original estimate. It will cover a 21.7 kilometre track that will start from the KESC Power House and terminate at the Municipal Park also known as Aurangzeb Park (see map). Part of the platform — around 3.45 kilometres — will be elevated and the rest will be at ground level.
Given the increase in the cost of the Green Line, it is likely that the other lines will end up requiring more money as well, which will significantly balloon the cost of the entire project. Depending on the final design, routes and the eventual implementation, the cost of all six BRTs is going to be well over 50 billion rupees. The JICA study had initially calculated the project to cost 36 billion rupees.
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Even though Karachi’s BRTs will cost less than the BRTs in other countries (for example Colombia and Indonesia), many experts argue that for the cost, the number of passengers that the Green Line shall serve is very low.