MaaS: The Plan, Book & Ride Journey

The concept of MaaS is to use a single app to access and pay for various transport modes within a city or beyond, and the app will give options to allow a traveler to select the most suitable transport mode.

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MaaS: The Plan, Book & Ride Journey
MaaS: The Plan, Book & Ride Journey
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Urban Transportation

Abstract

Mobility as a service (MaaS) is a relatively new concept, which holds the promise of a paradigm shift in the provision of urban mobility. The concept of MaaS is to use a single app to access and pay for various transport modes within a city or beyond, and the app will give options to allow a traveller to select the most suitable transport mode. The concept of MaaS is enabled by the current mass uptake of smartphones and social media as well as ubiquitous internet connections. 

Introduction

Traditionally, a traveller needs different tickets for different transport modes and/or different operators. In recent years, public transport operators have made considerable efforts to provide a single public transport ticket to allow a traveller to use public transport services from different transport operators in the same city or region. However, recently also many new transport service provisions have entered the market, such as bicycle sharing, car sharing and ride sharing. 

Usage of those new transport modes is accelerated by increasing concerns from users for sustainability and the environment. In addition, changes in lifestyles of younger generations and people who choose to live in cities rather than the traditional suburban lifestyle, which depends on private car as the main transport mode. 

Modern mobility should offer a high level of flexibility and convenience. The public transport operator association has already forecasted that combining various transport modes, e.g. car-sharing, taxi, shared taxis, bicycle and bike-sharing, car-pooling, and demand-responsible transport can complement the classic fixed-lined and routed public transport. 

The changes in personal mobility markets have presented great opportunities for urban mobility and new players, e.g. travel brokers, to enter the market. Travel brokers have developed smartphone-based apps to integrate available transport modes and enable seamless multi-modal travel. Such an app offers its users one-stop access to a wide range of travel services through a single app. Such an app may simply just allow users to get information on various options and use the same account to pay for the chosen service, e.g. Go Denver in the US. However, some apps are built up as a monthly subscription service when a user or a household decided their desired combination of transport and associated amount, such as UbiGo in Gothenburg, Sweden. Mobility as a Service (MaaS) often refers to the latter one.

The changes in personal mobility markets also have shifted the roles of public authorities. Public authorities are moving beyond their conventional role as infrastructure providers by enabling and promoting the mobility services of non-conventional providers. Public authorities and public transport companies are now using the services of new enterprises and new platforms in order to reduce the need for costly investments in new transport infrastructure, equipment and operation systems.

The Concept of MaaS

The monthly or yearly subscription of public transport, i.e. season ticket, is widely used in many cities and regions. Often, such season ticket offers unlimited use of various public transport services in a city or a region, e.g. commuter train, metro and bus, even though the public transport services may be provided by different operators. Daily, weekly and monthly subscription to bicycle sharing is also available. For example, Vélib in many French cities offers a monthly subscription with which a rental bicycle can be used free of charge for half an hour per day.

Some cities allow using pre-paid public transport cards to use other transport services, e.g. the public transport card, Metro Card, in Shanghai can also be used to pay for taxis. However, the monthly subscription of a combination of various transport services is not widely used yet. The revolution MaaS has brought to the personal mobility market is a monthly subscription combining various transport services. With a package of MaaS, a user can have e.g. unlimited usage of public transport, a number of taxi trips, a number of days using car rental, etc.

A such business model is inspired by the business model of the current personal communication market. In the old times, phone bills were paid based on usage. Then mobile phone companies started to offer a package including a number of calls and texts. Now in Europe, some mobile phone companies offer a package including a number of calls, texts and usage of the internet. There are subscriptions which cover local and roaming in other countries. MaaS simply takes the subscription model into the transport market.

Although current MaaS is still operated at a local level much effort is being made into turning MaaS into a global solution. MaaS Global, a company in Finland, has claimed that its App, Whim, is the first MaaS solution in the world. Currently, Whim in Helsinki offers four types of MaaS services, i.e. Light, Medium, Premium and Pay-as-you-go. All services include unlimited usage of public transport and a number of taxi rides. Medium and Premium services include 2 and 5-day rental car usage respectively. UbiGo in Gothenburg, Sweden, covers a wider range of transport modes than Whim in Helsinki. In addition to public transport, taxi and car rentals, UbiGo also offers one-stop access to car-sharing and bicycle-sharing. The subscription can be modified on a monthly basis according to personal needs at different periods of a year.

Currently, all available MaaS services target local residents, i.e. commuters, even though MaaS may offer great value also to visitors to a city. A visitor may feel difficulties understanding local public transport systems and buying tickets. Although Google Maps and other map providers offer information on public transport in most major cities worldwide, travellers, particularly business travellers often go for the easiest options, e.g. taking a taxi or renting a car, in an unfamiliar city. Taxi or car rental is not only expensive, but in some cases, they also may not be the best option, e.g. if the city is congested, has limited parking spaces or restricted access control. Thus, a traveller may find himself/herself in a stressful situation in a city even though the city has excellent public transport services.

There is a vision to enable a user to use the same app to travel in different cities worldwide and to have the same level of services as in the home city. Uber has realised the vision for taxi services. A user of Uber can use the same app to call an Uber car in anywhere in the world where Uber services are available without being worried about costs and different currency. To realise the vision of global availability for MaaS, the MaaS Alliance has been created in 2015, which is a public-private partnership, that aims to create the foundation for the mass market uptake of MaaS in Europe and beyond. Much of the current work of the MaaS Alliance is focused on openness and interoperability of data, roaming cost, billing and clearing, and business rules of different actors.

Operating MaaS: Various Conditions

Despite different business models, implementing and operating a MaaS service requires a single identity for a user, open data and open payment methods from various transport modes. If a transport operator is not willing to use a third party’s payment to buy its ticket or to not allow a third party to sell its tickets on their behalf services of the transport operators cannot be included in MaaS. In many countries, public transport tickets have been heavily regulated and no third party is allowed to sell tickets rather than the operator itself. Within such a legal framework, integrated ticketing of various modes may not be possible, thus MaaS is also not feasible.

Operating MaaS requires a single identity for a traveller to travel with different modes. This is not a new concept. In the air transport sector, paper tickets or physical tickets had disappeared for years. An air traveller uses his/her identity to access air transport services without carrying any physical tickets. Since air travel requires ID documents for security reasons, such ticketless travelling is a consequence of the nature of air travel. In recent years, railway ticketing also has been upgraded to electronic ticketing, although paper tickets are still in use. 

A railway passenger can buy a railway ticket and save the QR data on a smartphone which can be inspected by train conductors. Some train companies, e.g. Thalys, an international high-speed train operator in Europe, offer its passengers to book and travel using their frequent traveller cards only. Yet most surface transport modes in cities do not require a user to carry an ID while travelling, using a single identity for traveller may be challenging. However, very often people say that ‘they often forget their public transport cards but they rarely forget their mobile phones. In another word, smartphones have become people’s new ID. Therefore, using the new ‘ID’ to travel through different transport modes in a city is feasible.

There are some basic conditions which must be met in order to develop and operate MaaS. Conditions for operating MaaS in a city may be summarised as below:

  • A wide range of transport modes are available in the city;
  • Majority of the transport operators open their data including real-time data to a third party;
  • The majority of the transport operators allow a third party to sell their service;
  • The majority of transport operators offer e-tickets or e-payment to access their services.

MaaS would only be operated in a city when the city offers different transport modes. Since public transport still is at the centre of MaaS, a city must have adequate public transport services to allow users to travel in the city easily without having to own a car. In another word, MaaS may only be operated in a place where users are willing to move away from car-dependent daily transport. That is often in a city where public transport services are already quite good and many residents do not see the essentials of owning a car. 

If a MaaS provider is planning to include bicycle sharing in the service, the provider must access real-time data at each bicycle sharing station to enable its user to rent a bicycle or return a rental bicycle. Moreover, current taxi apps allow a user to track his/her reserved vehicle’s location. MaaS will have to offer the equivalent services when a MaaS subscriber chooses the taxi service. It means that the taxi company must allow MaaS to access its real-time operation data. It can be foreseen that if MaaS becomes mainstream travellers’ choice, more transport operators would be willing to share their data with MaaS developers. However, at this stage, enabling all transport operators to make their data available for MaaS developers remains challenging.

A key success factor of MaaS is to use a single account to pay for all transport services. A user of MaaS does not need to have different cards, different accounts or individual payments. Without MaaS, a user may have an Uber app and a local taxi app, even though the two apps are in the same smartphone and may use the same credit card for payment. Currently, there are huge numbers of apps for transport services available in app stores. For example, there are more than 60,000 travel apps available on Google Play. With MaaS, the user can have only one app to replace a number of transport apps. There have been increasing concerns about the negative impacts of MaaS on competition of travel app services and the provision of innovative transport modes. Since many apps are developed by Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs), MaaS may be seen as a threat to SMEs in the travel app market.

One essential condition to operating MaaS is that smartphones can be used to access various transport modes. That means that operators of those transport modes must allow various forms of e-ticket or e-payment. For example, a MaaS app can be inspected by a conductor to prove the traveller has paid for his/her journey. If a user has chosen a shared bicycle, a MaaS app should be able to release a bicycle from the parking slot. Public transport often requires tickets to go through physical barriers. MaaS may only be used when a public transport provider allows passing the physical barriers by scanning smartphones. Additional investments into infrastructure may be required. Whether or not a transport operator is willing to pay for such additional costs is a challenge for MaaS providers.

Process & Challenges 

If all conditions above have been met in a city, implementation of MaaS still faces significant challenges on users’ perspectives, business model and policy support, even though MaaS has been seen by transport professionals as potentially enabling a paradigm shift toward a more sustainable urban mobility. There is no doubt that MaaS does have great potential to offer convenient and comfortable travels in a city without owning a car. MaaS can help a user plan their journeys based on the user’s calendar, thus providing the user with stress-free travel planning. 

Implementation of MaaS at a local level can make even more people choose sustainable transport modes rather than using private cars. Researchers in Gothenburg have concluded that 93% of participants were satisfied with their travel and 97% wanted to continue using UbiGo.

However, if a MaaS service only targets local customers, the benefits may be limited. Firstly, decreasing car ownership levels have been observed in big cities due to changes in lifestyles, increasing concerns about sustainability and health and improved services and facilities for sustainable transport modes, e.g. widely available real-time public transport information, dedicated cycling lanes, etc. Those, who do not have private cars and travel by public transport, use shared cars and cycle to work, are often familiar with various transport options in the local areas and aware of all potential options and costs. 

They are also the generation who knows how to find information through the internet. They may have installed hundreds of apps to help them plan their journeys and pay for their journey. To a certain degree, a user can today already travel only with his/ her smartphone to access many transport services. Notable examples are car-sharing and taxi apps. Therefore, making a user shift from familiar travel apps to one single app is a challenge for MaaS providers. Yet the users’ perspectives toward MaaS have not been well studied and understood.

Even when MaaS would aim at a Pan-European or global market, i.e. to provide MaaS for a user wherever the user travels MaaS may still face strong competition from existing travel apps which have already offered global services. Besides the famous Uber app, eCab, a taxi app, also offers taxi booking and payment services using one single account in 6 European countries as well as in India, Canada and Lebanon. A MaaS service will have to work with existing providers, e.g. eCab, instead of attempting to integrate individual taxi companies again. It remains unclear whether such providers are willing to integrate their platforms with MaaS. That will have to depend on the growth of the MaaS market.

As mentioned, if MaaS would become the main-stream travel app, various transport operators and service providers would be willing to share their data and services with MaaS providers. A good example is Google Transit. For many years, various government efforts have been made and research projects have been conducted in a unified public transport data format. Despite the efforts, public transport companies were still not willing to abandon their own data formats. However, when Google Transit becomes widely available, many transport operators voluntarily supply their data following the pre-defined data format Google Transit. There are two reasons to enable public transport operators to work with Google Transit. One is that they want their public transport services to be included in Google Maps and navigation services which enjoy a dominant position worldwide. The second reason is that Google Transit APIs, General Transit Feed Specification (GTFS) and GTFS Real Time, are simple and user-friendly. 

MaaS providers should learn from Google Transit and develop user-friendly feed APIs to allow individual operators to join MaaS simply and easily. That would require pre-defined data formats and a quality check mechanism. MaaS currently works on open, standard-based system architecture. However, the issues of data formats and quality checks have not yet been addressed. Data quality is essential for MaaS since it will have a direct impact on customers’ experiences. Different from Google Transit, which is free of charge to users, MaaS must guarantee the quality of the information in order to build and maintain customer confidence.

There are increasing concerns about the competitiveness of the MaaS market. Currently, MaaS is still operated at a local level. When MaaS is extended to the global market, SMEs that are in the travel information and app services may face unfair competition from big players. MaaS may also be a threat to innovation in the urban mobility market, which has seen many innovative solutions in the past few years. As sharing economy may continue to play an important role in many aspects of daily life, sharing economy in the mobility market will continue to influence people’s choice of transport modes. While current MaaS does include car-sharing and ride-sharing in its services the growing new transport modes of the sharing economy will have an impact on the future MaaS market.

Role in Future Mobility

Currently, MaaS targets young customers who use smartphones for information and payment. The benefits of MaaS in the ageing society have not been studied. Contrary to current targeted customers, the authors believe that MaaS would benefit elderly travellers more than younger ones. MaaS may be a good solution to meet the travel demands of the ageing society. Current research has shown more than 60% of elderly people in the UK own smartphones. This is the first generation of elderly people who are used to smartphones and the internet. Thus they will continue to use smartphones for their travel needs. A one-stop solution to access and pay for all types of transport modes would thus be an excellent solution for elderly travellers. Research also has shown that elderly travellers conduct more long trips than younger ones. Therefore, MaaS covering home cities as well as over sea destinations would be welcome to elderly travellers who frequently travel abroad. In addition, MaaS may be seen as a travel companion that offers security and safety services at the same time. This can offer independence to elderly citizens, which is an important factor in enhancing the quality of life.

In addition to all the previously mentioned reasons for moving to MaaS, the shift to a truly integrated shared mobility ecosystem will facilitate the transition to shared automated mobility. MaaS may be only fully realised when automated vehicles are available. Although automated vehicles have many potential benefits such as enhanced safety and efficiency, improved comfort and convenience levels for travellers and improved social inclusions, there is a possibility of increasing Vehicle Km Travelled (VKT) when using automated vehicles as personal vehicles, resulting in increased congestion and energy consumption. Automated vehicles have been tested in Singapore as a Demand Responsive Transport solution. Automated MaaS (A MaaS) will offer a great alternative to personal cars and will maximise the benefits of automated vehicles.

A more connected future for rail

Mobile ticketing and payments could also be transformed by rail companies that could leverage passenger smartphones to improve the speed and convenience of frequent and recurring transactions. Rail operators are partnering with fintech companies to offer international passengers the option to pay for tickets in their own currency offering transparency on spending for both leisure and business travellers.

Such opportunities could also increase tenfold through the mobile channel where rail operators could sell to passengers in more sophisticated ways, when and wherever. Similar to airline-airport-retailer partnerships, rail companies can also embed further ancillary revenue opportunities into the journey through partnerships with retailers and other travel suppliers. After all, these services are now expected by rail travellers and this expectation will only get higher from an increasingly tech-savvy public.

Completing the end-to-end journey will be crucial to improving the rail passenger experience. Passengers need to know that they can plan seamless and frictionless train journeys using their mobile devices. Once this is possible, rail travel will become a more attractive proposition for both short and long-haul journeys. By taking a mobile-first approach to rail travel, operators can connect passengers to other transportation hubs, manage peak-time capacity in a more efficient manner and increase the opportunity for ancillary revenue.

  • Seamless and Frictionless Travel: Given that it is a fixed transport system, the rail industry will not replicate the success of Uber so that consumers can summon trains. But by adopting a user-centric approach and focusing on its passengers, the rail industry can unlock opportunities. The seamless ability to complete an end-to-end journey is key to improving the passenger perception of rail services. Solving the last mile conundrum will be crucial for rail operators who will seek to integrate other rail content with additional transport modes.

Conclusion

Personal urban mobility has been changed towards a smartphone, e-ticket and app-based market. There are many new urban mobility solutions available which are sustainable such as ride sharing and car sharing. Often such solutions are enabled by updates of smartphone apps and ubiquitous internet connections. With the increasing options available in the urban mobility market, there is scope to combine all available options and use a single app to access and pay for all transport modes. Mobility as a service (MaaS) is a relatively new concept, which holds the promise of providing a paradigm shift in urban mobility. 

The concept of MaaS is to use a single app to access and pay for various transport modes in a city or in a wide area and the app will give options to allow a traveller to select the most suitable transport options. MaaS was initiated in Finland where public transport operators opened their data to app developers and allow e-tickets. MaaS is available as a monthly subscription or pay-as-you-go. Enabling the operation of MaaS in a city requires good public transport services, availability of various transport modes, open data and e-ticketing.

The operation of MaaS faces many challenges in users’ perspectives, policy framework and business models. When attempting the operation of MaaS on a global scale, there are concerns about the competitiveness of the mobility market which may have negative impacts on innovation and SMEs. There is a possibility that the global MaaS market may be dominated by a few big players. Therefore, an appropriate policy framework which allows the implementation of MaaS and benefits MaaS to travellers, whilst at the same time preventing unfair competition is essential.

Although the current targeted customers of MaaS are mainly the young generations who wish to adopt a sustainable lifestyle, MaaS may have great benefits for elderly travellers and play an important role to meet the travel demand of the ageing society. Moreover, MaaS may be the perfect solution when automated vehicles are available in the market. Automated MaaS (A-MaaS) will offer a great alternative to personal vehicles and its integration with public transport means which shall maximise the benefits of connected and easy travelling.

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