Skip to main content

Assocations news around the globe

There will be no roadside parking in the Finnish capital, Helsinki, 15 years from now, predicts ITS Finland’s CEO Sampo Hietanen. “Instead, a self-driving car will pick you up within in ten minutes of your pressing a button on your smartphone. The car will continue its journey once you have reached your destination.”
October 29, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
Parking in Helsinki

ITS Finland

Helsinki ponders smart solutions

There will be no roadside parking in the Finnish capital, Helsinki, 15 years from now, predicts 7350 ITS Finland’s CEO Sampo Hietanen. “Instead, a self-driving car will pick you up within in ten minutes of your pressing a button on your smartphone. The car will continue its journey once you have reached your destination.”

By 2030, he continues, self-driving cars will account for the vast majority of the country's road transport. “People will have reclaimed the streets, with wide cycleways being common and trees growing in places that only a few years previously were occupied by cars hour after hour.

“Helsinki's concept of city boulevards is starting to sound really smart. But who will manage the system? You can't be fully content if it's Google.” Finland, he believes, has “only a couple of years to create a system that also allows local service providers to thrive. The opportunities are real. But, if we're not on our toes today, someone else will make the revolutionary step and we'll have to follow the leader.”

  • %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 ITS UK ITS United Kingdom false #ITSUK true false%>
  • %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkInternal ITS Italia ITSItalia false #ITSItaly true false%>
  • %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkInternal ITS Australia ITS OZ false #ITSAustralia true false%>

ITS UK

ITS UK launches the first  young professionals group

288 ITS UK has launched a young professionals' interest group – a first for any national ITS association, believes general secretary Jennie Martin. It responds, she says, to a shortage of new recruits entering the ITS field, and the science, technology, engineering and mathematics sector generally.

A key role will be to give the industry “valuable intelligence” on best practice in recruiting, developing and retaining young people. Inaugural chair is Mara Makoni, of consultants Mouchel, who says: “We are conscious of the immense contribution that we young professionals can make to the ITS sector and the transport industry in general, bringing fresh perspectives and challenging existing mindsets.”


ITS Italia

Italy ponders public transport procurement


4155 TTS Italia has worked closely with the new Italian Transport Authority (ITA), which became operative at the start of 2014, to help define fresh criteria for the procurement of public transport services by regional and local authorities.

The new rules are designed to encourage more open entry to the sector, greater transparency in procurement, more efficiency in management and better service levels for passengers.

TTS Italia has been joined in its efforts by members including Roma Servizi per la Mobilità, the agency that coordinates public and private transport in the Italian capital; 5T, which played a pioneering role in developing a similar role in Turin; and the national rail operator Trenitalia.

All have stressed the key role of ITS in meeting the authority's central aim of promoting and protecting competition in the transport sector.

ITA started its operations with twin investigations into rail and local public transport provision. Its other responsibilities include tolled motorways and freight movement.


ITS Australia

ITS Australia backs transport innovation centre


858 ITS Australia is collaborating with AutoCRC automotive R&D hub to support a bid for funding from the country's Department of Industry and Science for an Australian innovative transport cooperative research centre. This aims to put Australian organisations firmly among the global leaders in the ITS industry by enabling them to deliver new products for a data-driven world - for both internal use and export - that will achieve increased transport-sector productivity and reduce costs.

The initiative is aiming for extensive industry support and a wide-ranging scope for action. Established in 2005 under Australia's Cooperative Research Centre programme, AutoCRC specialises in low emission vehicle technology development.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • 10th ITS European Congress call for papers
    November 15, 2013
    The European Programme Committee has issued a call for ITS experts to submit a Special Interest Session proposal or a paper to be considered for presentation and publication at the 10th European Congress and Exhibition on Intelligent Transport Systems and Services taking place in Helsinki, Finland, 16–19 June, 2014. Technical papers may address the institutional, business and economic aspects of ITS as well as technical subjects; Scientific papers should concentrate on research and scholarship as they wi
  • Demonstrations confirmed for ITS World Congress Montreal 2017
    September 26, 2017
    More than 25 companies and Universities are lined up to present the latest technologies in advanced mobility at ITS World Congress Montreal 2017. These will include real-time link with TMCs across Canada for virtual TMC demonstration; a data- and vision-based approach to connected traffic light implementation and predictive technology; V2X safety applications and; the safety benefits of live video at busy intersections. Participants will also be able to experience real-time space detection technology wit
  • ITS World Congress premieres Kongressnavigator
    September 26, 2012
    Available for download from this week, the ITS World Congress ‘Kongressnavigator’is the first app to combine all the most important things at a congress. It helps visitors navigate through the city and the congress centre, and it integrates the conference programme, transportation schedules and tickets. All this comes together on the smartphone - now available for the iPhone, Android and as a mobile web application.
  • Logging on to public transport
    November 15, 2012
    Cape Town’s public transport commuters can now use their cell phones to access real-time timetables and plan their routes, whether they are travelling by train, taxi, MyCiTi buses or the city’s Golden Arrow Bus service. FindMyWay is a free public service website that brings together all the modes of transport within the city, so that commuters can easily access the information in one place. Logging on to www.findmyway.mobi and www.gometro.co.za from a cell phone with an internet connection gives commuters