Article Highlights

Key Takeaway:

A new report from the Victoria state auditor-general found that Conduent was too ambitious with its original rollout schedule for the state’s planned fare system, and state transport officials didn’t try to avoid the ensuing problems and disputes, leading to delays and higher costs. More delays are possible.

Key Data:

• Document: “Modernising myki.” Victoria state auditor-general’s report, March 2026

• Document: Letter from Conduent Victoria Ticketing System, responding to auditor’s report, Feb. 2026

Organizations Mentioned:

• Auditor-General’s Office
• DTP (Victoria)
• Conduent
• HCLTech

The Victoria state auditor-general’s office in Australia concluded that an “overly optimistic delivery schedule” by Conduent Transportation and ensuing dispute with state transport officials resulted in a costly reset of the state’s major fare system project in 2024, delaying it by 18 months and adding 25% in capital costs.

State auditor-general, Andrew Greaves, who issued the 54-page report Wednesday (download report below), didn’t spare criticism of the Victoria Department of Transport and Planning, or DTP, which oversees the project. The report charges the state with poor planning and other issues that also risk delaying the project again in the future.

Subscription Required

This premium content is only available to subscribers

Article has about1458words.

To keep reading, subscribe today

Get access to premium content from the only global publication devoted exclusively to mobility payments by subscribing today to the most authoritative source for news and analysis in the industry.

Already a member? Log in here