-
Advertisement
Hong Kong transport
Opinion
SCMP Editorial

Editorial | Hong Kong tunnel incident just a bump in tolls road

  • But city authorities must explain why thousands of motorists were overcharged on the first working day of new payment system

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
The city needs to explain why thousands of motorists were overcharged at Hong Kong’s Western Harbour Tunnel when new time-sensitive toll charges kicked in. Photo: Jelly Tse

Time was not on the side of thousands of motorists who were overcharged at the start of the latest phase of a new time-adjusted toll system. The incident was, of course, unfortunate, but it should not deter Hong Kong’s journey towards finding a solution to long-standing problems with traffic jams at the crossings.

Authorities must provide a full explanation of what happened at the Western Harbour Tunnel on Monday. It is good that apologetic Commissioner for Transport Angela Lee Chung-yan has announced an investigation after about 4,700 motorists were each charged a few dollars extra.

Those affected crossed between 10.02am and 11.04am on the first working day of the new system introduced the previous day at all three of the cross-harbour tunnels. Lee said an employee using a previous charging scheme may have been behind the mistake, and 70 per cent of those affected had received refunds by the following day.

Advertisement

It is encouraging that the Western crossing was the only site where such a glitch occurred, and there was smooth traffic flow under the toll adjustment scheme meant to ease congestion by varying charges depending on the time of day.

From 7am to 11am, 64,000 vehicles passed through the three crossings. Traffic at the Western Harbour Tunnel slightly increased and vehicle numbers at the other two crossings dropped.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x