INRIX released its Global Congestion Ranking. It is based on annual hours of congestion per driver.
http://inrix.com/press-releases/scorecard-2017/ (http://inrix.com/press-releases/scorecard-2017/)
Meanwhile TomTom has not yet released its 2017 Traffic Index, so I'll use the 2016 version. Their ranking is based on delay (travel time index, free-flow vs congested speed).
https://www.tomtom.com/en_gb/trafficindex/list?citySize=LARGE&continent=ALL&country=ALL (https://www.tomtom.com/en_gb/trafficindex/list?citySize=LARGE&continent=ALL&country=ALL)
The differences between the two methodologies are HUGE.
At INRIX, Los Angeles is the world's most congested city. At TomTom, it ranks 12th. Similarly, at INRIX, Atlanta ranks 10th, at TomTom, it ranks 104th.
Also, the INRIX list has U.S. cities accounting for 10 of the 25 world's most congested cities. At TomTom, only 1 U.S. city is listed in the top 25, only 3 in the top 50 and 10 in the top 100.
The INRIX scorecard also has some weird Russian cities, with several small-size Siberian cities in the top 25. Is 'Aerodromnyy' even a city? Wikipedia doesn't have an article on that place. It sounds like the Russian term for 'Airport'.
Baton Rouge's traffic woes are up there with the largest cities in the world. (67th on INRIX and 106th on TomTom.)
I don't even use any of those - Google Maps is my main source of finding congestion.
Quote from: Chris on February 09, 2018, 08:23:46 AM
The INRIX scorecard also has some weird Russian cities, with several small-size Siberian cities in the top 25. Is 'Aerodromnyy' even a city? Wikipedia doesn't have an article on that place. It sounds like the Russian term for 'Airport'.
I searched for that on Google Maps; the best it seemed to come up with was a bus station in Nizhny Novgorod.