How Can Hokkaidō’s Troubled Rail System Survive?

Society

Kishi Kunihiro [Profile]

The railway system of Hokkaidō is now in a critical state. The island prefecture’s population is shrinking, while car ownership has risen, causing train ridership to decline. Half of the existing rail network may be unsustainable. How should this problem be addressed?

Thorough Disclosure and Consultation in Advance by JR Hokkaidō

Our team called on JR Hokkaidō to take full account of local circumstances and to conduct thorough disclosure and scrupulous consultation with those affected in advance of moves like station closures, termination of train services, and fare hikes. We also noted the need for the company to promote ridership with measures tailored to the conditions along each of its train lines, working in unison with the municipalities served by the lines and with other concerned parties.

JR Hokkaidō also needs to improve convenience for riders with moves like the adjustment of timetables to optimize connections with buses and other types of public transit and the improvement of services at stations and on board. But our team judged that it would be difficult as a practical matter to implement the company’s proposal for vertical separation between infrastructure ownership and transport operations, which would place an additional burden on money-strapped municipalities.

In addition, we urged the prompt start of studies at the local level concerning the rail links that will be hard to sustain based only on efforts by transit operators and support from the government. As specific topics for consideration, we referred to initiatives to maintain and improve the attractiveness and convenience of train stations, local cooperation with the provision of on-board sales and shops, and ownership or leasing of running stock by entities like public-private joint ventures.

Looking ahead to the completion of the Shinkansen high-speed rail link to Sapporo in 2030, we identified the roles of the concerned entities over the period to come. We called on the prefectural government to (a) draft a design for the future shape of Hokkaidō’s public transportation network, (b) become actively involved in consultations at the local level, (c) seek fundamental support from the national government, (d) extend cooperation and support to initiatives at the local level aimed at sustaining the necessary railway network, and (e) broadly implement measures to promote ridership.

A Crucial Year for Starting Consultations with Municipalities

There is a deep-seated opinion in Hokkaidō that it will be impossible to solve the problems of the prefecture’s railway system under the current framework, by which the system’s deficits are offset by the income from the management stabilization fund set up when the national railway system was privatized and split up, and that the national government should provide fundamental support for JR Hokkaidō and the preservation of the prefecture’s railways. But the national government continues to take the stance that it has already provided considerable support to JR Hokkaidō and that the next step is for local areas to take the lead. One element underlying this position is the belief that regular bus routes can provide the required minimum of local public transit and so it is not necessary to prioritize railways.

Meanwhile, the government and ruling coalition have set up a team that is deliberating the issue of JR Hokkaidō. In April consultations began between the company and the municipalities served by the Sōya Line, and discussions about the future of rail service are underway in localities along other lines as well. The coming year will be a crucial period for determining the place of railway lines in the intercity transit network and deciding which parts of the existing system are to be kept in service.

(Originally published in Japanese on May 15, 2017. Banner photo: A winter scene at Mashike Station on the Rumoi Main Line, taken in January 2014. In December 2016 service between Mashike and Rumoi was terminated and the station closed. © NOBU/PIXTA)

Related Tags

Hokkaidō depopulation aging railway public transportation Japan Railways

Kishi KunihiroView article list

Associate professor, Graduate School Faculty of Engineering, Hokkaidō University. Specializes in traffic planning, urban planning, and traffic engineering. Born in 1970. Graduated from the Faculty of Engineering at Hokkaidō University and went on to earn his doctorate in engineering from the university’s graduate school. Has held his current post since 2008.

Other articles in this report