Under the Bus Contracting Model (BCM) for Singapore’s public bus industry, the Land Transport Authority (LTA) owns all bus assets (such as buses, bus depots, bus interchanges/terminals, and so forth). As for buses, the LTA is also responsible for the renewal and replacement of these assets, and currently maintains a pool of spare buses that can be readily leased to bus operators when needed.
However, in recent years, a steady increase in excess buses (that have not been leased to any operators) has been observed. These vehicles are registered, yet remain garaged in bus depots and not in revenue service. Furthermore, time spent while in storage still counts towards the 17-year statutory lifespan for public buses. Hence, this article aims to shed some light on current practices.
These developments come on top of an unprecedented bus industry spending, with LTA posting a $1.013 billion deficit for the 2018/19 financial year.
See also: Transitioning of Buses to BCM
Excess buses in depots
Under the BCM, bus operators pay LTA a fee to lease public buses. At the same time, operators have to meet service standards set out by the LTA, governing the frequency, operating hours and percentage of high capacity buses deployed on a route. These standards change over time as the LTA tweaks the level of service required.
As a result, bus operators have a financial incentive to optimize their operations and minimize the number of buses they lease from LTA. One way operators achieve this is through efficient scheduling of buses – for example, increased use of bus interlining (which schedules bus drivers on several different bus routes during a shift). This practice rose to notoriety when it was blamed for a spate of Bus Captain resignations in September 2016, but all bus operators engage in some form of this practice.
See also: Bus Interlining
Bus depots functioning as excess bus storage
Storage buses are typically parked at a corner of a bus depot (most prominently in Seletar Bus Depot). They are formally assigned to an operator (the lessee of the depot where the bus is parked) by means of vehicle registration, but the operator does not use these vehicles, nor does it pay LTA to lease these buses. It is understood that the upkeep of these storage buses is maintained by the said bus operator.
Some of these storage buses were registered and directly assigned to the storage fleet, without seeing a day of revenue service.
More recently, the LTA had laid-up buses in storage, likely to avoid having to pay road tax on these vehicles. It is unclear why this is practice is carried out, since all road tax revenue is returned to the Government. With or without the lay-up, buses in storage are still formally registered and thus count down towards their 17-year statutory lifespan even while sitting unused in storage. The current practice of mothballing registered buses is thus a wasteful use of a bus’ statutory lifespan.
Buses in storage:
LTA Storage Buses (as of 11 Nov 2024) | |
Bus Model | Quantity |
MAN A22 (Euro V) | 9 |
MAN A22 (Euro 6) | 14 |
Reference: SGWiki – LTA Storage Buses
Since 1 Feb 2020, several buses were taken out of storage for replacement of retiring Volvo B10TL buses as well as new bus services.
In late April 2020, several MAN A22 (Euro 6) buses were registered and were parked at Ulu Pandan Bus Depot under storage.
In March 2021, 29 storage MAN A22 (Euro 6) buses were transferred to Tower Transit in preparation for its awarded term of the Sembawang-Yishun Bus Package which will commence in September 2021.
In May 2021, 40 Mercedes-Benz Citaro buses under storage changed their storage location from Seletar Bus Depot to Loyang Bus Depot. 39 MAN A22 buses were transferred back to LTA Storage from Tower Transit upon the commencement of the second term of the Bulim Bus Package.
In August 2021, several MAN A95 (Euro 6) buses were registered and were parked at Ulu Pandan Bus Depot under storage.
Between October – December 2021, a large number of storage buses were taken out and leased to SBS Transit, which was for the early retirement of buses. Many of these buses are parked at Ulu Pandan Bus Depot. In addition, leftover buses from the Sembawang-Yishun Bus Package under SMRT Buses were also transferred to SBS Transit. These buses started revenue service with SBS Transit from Jan 2022.
Several storage buses were also used to replace the retiring Volvo B9TL (CDGE) buses in September 2023.
Excess buses incoming
Despite the many buses currently in storage, a large influx of new buses is expected in the near future. Unless there are plans for a drastic increase in bus service levels in the coming months or years, the glut of excess buses in storage (registered or otherwise) will continue to exist.
In February 2020, a total of 150 Euro 6 single-deck buses (MAN A22) and 250 Euro 6 double-deck buses (MAN A95) were in the midst of registration as part of a bus purchase in 2018. Registration of these new buses has been slow due to the introduction of 50 diesel hybrid buses (Volvo B5LH) and 60 electric buses (BYD K9 (Gemilang), Linkker LM312, Yutong E12, Yutong E12DD) which are bring prioritized for introduction to revenue service.
All 250 MAN A95 Euro 6 double-deck buses and 150 MAN A22 Euro 6 single deck buses were registered as of 28 Feb 2020 & 30 Apr 2020 respectively.
In addition, the LTA has awarded tenders for more buses, namely 111 Euro 6 double-deck buses (MAN A95) awarded later in 2018, followed by a further 100 Three-Door Euro 6 Double Decker Buses scheduled to enter service in 2020. The 111 MAN A95 Euro 6 Batch 2 buses commenced registration from 20 March 2020, while the 3 Door Euro 6 Double Decker buses commenced registration from 25 January 2021.
As of 21 Jan 2022:
Euro 6 Single Deck – 1st Batch | Euro 6 Double Deck – 1st Batch | Euro 6 Diesel Hybrid Buses | Euro 6 Double Deck – 2nd Batch | Electric Buses | 3-Door Double Deck buses | |
Quantity Registered | 150 / 150 | 250 / 250 | 50 / 50 | 111 / 111 | 60 / 60 | 100 / 100 |
Registration date | May 2018 – Apr 2020 | May 2018 – Feb 2020 | Nov 2018 – Mar 2019 | Mar 2020 – Oct 2021 | Jan 2020 – Aug 2021 | Jan 2021 – Jan 2022 |
One possible reason for the accelerated bus orders and deliveries can be traced to 2018. At the Committee of Supply Debate 2018, Transport Minister Khaw Boon Wan promised a significant 450 new buses to increase capacity on existing or new routes that run parallel to MRT lines whilst renewal works were ongoing.
To accelerate the renewal of the ageing assets, we will reinforce our bus network to provide some back-up capacity. We will be deploying 450 buses to bolster capacity along existing bus routes which support critical stretches of the rail network undergoing renewal. These are new buses. They were ordered to meet growing ridership demand and to replace our ageing bus fleet. We are opportunistically bringing forward their purchase and deployment to strengthen the resilience of our public transport network in the interim.
Some progress has been made towards delivering this promise, with the introduction of several Short Trip Services (2A, 7A, 7B), additional trips on their parent services, and a slew of full-day express bus services (12e, 147e, 167e, 851e and 960e) introduced since 2018. However, the number of new buses allocated to these new services fall far short of 450 buses, and rationalization of nearly all these routes have been carried out, with shorter operating hours for 7A, 7B, 12e, 147e, 851e & 960e, and the withdrawal of 147e.
See also: Rationalisation of Bus Service Operations (2019/2020)
Moving forward
In addition to storage buses being parked at Seletar Bus Depot (removed and parked at other depots as of mid 2021), the remaining Euro 6 MAN buses that have yet to be registered (as part of the 2018 MAN Euro 6 bus order) are parked at PLG Logistics in Tuas South and ST Engineering Land Systems’ compound at Corporation Road, and it is not known how much costs are involved for the storage of these buses at private premises.
In late 2020, PLG Logistics leased another warehouse in Tuas South to house unregistered buses such as the Linkker LM312 and the retrofitted electric bus. These buses were transferred back to the PLG Logistics Tuas South facility in April 2021 and eventually were registered in July & August 2021.
Under contractual obligations, LTA will likely continue to receive these new buses at a time when there is an excess of unused buses in Singapore, unless it works out a revised timeline to defer the delivery of these new vehicles. With LTA rationalising bus routes recently and cutting excess in a time of unprofitability, it remains to be seen if the LTA will continue to be holding on to large numbers of unregistered buses.
Parliamentary Question
In July 2022, Mr Gerald Giam Yean Song (Member of the Singapore Parliament for Aljunied GRC) asked the Minister for Transport:
- whether the Ministry has data on the total number of buses operated or maintained by public transport operators
- of these, how many are currently stored at bus depots;
- what is the average age of these buses that are stored at bus depots; and
- why are these buses not being deployed for bus operations.
In response, Minister for Transport S Iswaran replied:
As of May 2022, we have around 5,800 public buses with an average fleet age of eight years. About 3% of them are kept at the depots to serve as an operational reserve.
See Also
- LTA Storage Buses – SGWiki
- Speech by Minister Khaw Boon Wan at the Ministry of Transport’s Committee of Supply Debate 2018 – MOT
- Written Reply to Parliamentary Question on Data on Total Number of Buses Operated or Maintained by Public Transport Operators and Stored at Bus Depots – MOT
Back to Bus Articles
My guess is SMRT doesn’t have the confidence to retain the Sembawang-Yishun package and the package also doesn’t include OC500LE.
Any winner will take the existing Citaro and a few SMRT A22 beside having to lease those A22s at storage.Beside that,I believe SMRT face shortage of BCs at Kranji and the expense of temporary loan BCs from Ang Mo Kio depot,Woodlands depot and it’s subsidiary company.With the travel ban still in place and the license of operating expired on 1st September,Maybe LTA decided to award to other operators instead and let them focus on Kranji and Woodlands for e time being.Probably they will win a package in 2021(Sengkang-Hougang & Loyang) or have to wait 2023 and beyond.
SMRT Buses has returned all of its Euro 6 A22s back to LTA storage. That’s ironic as everyone thought that SMRT will take in more buses to cover the shortfall from converting Batch 1 A22s into COMET-MAXI vehicles.
Maybe for the time being they doesn’t need the single deckers?Mandai still got two new service and also a hint they don’t have confidence in retaining the package?
Those A22s in BUDEP could be transferred to TTSG if it secures Bulim package. Those A22s in SEDEP should go to GASG for improvements to existing services.
GAS need so many A22 for existing service?They already got excess buses.What if they don’t win Bulim & Mandai this year?
TTS don’t ever dream,They only gobble electric of Hybrid buses which they think is cost effective.
SMRT keep on sending Euro VI A22 back and the 5 remains unknown.Their chances of retaining Mandai also very slim and they face Kranji manpower shortage also.
Clearly shown that LTA will favour SBST again.The buses will be for both bus packages.Only next year and beyond we will see new operators..
I am not suprise is if more Volvo B9TLs and A95 will go for storage in coming months.Just wait for the three door double decker to reach SG.
To prevent more wastage in long term,LTA need to early Deregistered the Euro III B9TLs and the Euro IV K230UBs.Just maintain Euro V diesel-powered buses and buy Hybrid Single deckers and double deckers to offset.
Storage location
SG1703L BUDEP
SG1709X SEDEP
SG1710R SEDEP
SG1711M SEDEP
SG1728R BUDEP
SG1729M BUDEP
SG1730H BUDEP
SG1731E SEDEP
SG1732C SEDEP
SG1733A SEDEP
SG1738L SEDEP
SG1739J SEDEP
SG1743X BUDEP
SG1744T BUDEP
SG1745R BUDEP
SG1746M BUDEP
Plus 73 Euro VI MAN A 22
SG5545A SEDEP
SG6105E SEDEP