The number of vehicles using toll roads in Spain fell to its lowest level since 1996, according to figures published by the Spanish Ministry of Public Works on Wednesday. An average of just 13,097 vehicles per day used toll roads in Spain during the first quarter of 2014, despite the fact that February saw a slight increase of 2.17 percent in comparison with the same month in 2013 and by 4.5 percent in comparison with January this year, while the figures for March were in turn 4.8 percent higher than in February. The average of 13,097 users per day on Spanish toll roads represents a 35.2 percent fall from the maximum 0f 20,230 vehicles per day which was recorded in 2007, before the start of the economic crisis. One positive sign is that there has also been an increase in the number of large vehicles (trucks and busses) using the toll roads. The first quarter saw a daily average of 2,230 vehicles of this type, 8.14 percent higher than a year ago, perhaps showing that companies are now willing to pay in order to move their goods around more quickly. Spain currently has 2,559.5 kilometers of toll roads, which is 50 percent more than in 1990, but these have struggled economically in the crisis with nine going bankrupt with total debts of over 4.5 billion Euros (6.23 billion US dollars). The debts recently prompted the Spanish government to propose reducing the debts by 50 percent and creating a fund which would issue 30 year bonds to guarantee their long term viability. These bankrupt roads are the ones which have suffered most in the first three months of 2014 with a 9.3 percent drop in users with 6 toll roads around the capital city of Madrid experiencing falls of between 27 and 15 percent in vehicle numbers.