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ITS America 2016 promises to be anything but ‘business-as-usual’ as its new president and CEO, Regina Hopper, aims to broaden the scope and discussions at the event, billed as “A New Show Representing This Transformative Moment in Intelligent Transportation.” Signifying the changes, this year’s event is in San Jose at the heart of Silicon Valley and has adopted the theme “Integrated Mobility. Transportation Redefined.”
May 13, 2016 Read time: 7 mins
ITS America’s Regina Hopper has instigated big changes for the San Jose event.

ITS America

Horizons widen at San Jose

560 ITS America 2016 promises to be anything but ‘business-as-usual’ as its new president and CEO, Regina Hopper, aims to broaden the scope and discussions at the event, billed as “A New Show Representing This Transformative Moment in Intelligent Transportation.” Signifying the changes, this year’s event is in San Jose at the heart of Silicon Valley and has adopted the theme “Integrated Mobility. Transportation Redefined.”

“When you look at the changes taking place in technology, energy and telecommunications and the move toward smart cities, the focus on sustainability, environmental protection, safety and new business models, transportation is at the centre of all of them – the centre of the Internet of Things,” says Hopper, “But there is no one place where all those conversations are taking place – that is until ITS America 2016 San Jose.”

‘Disruption’ will be a common thread running through the event. “Companies like Uber and Lyft have already shown that disruption is part of rapid technological change, and all parties know they need to engage – and that’s what San Jose is all about.”

Each of the three days will examine a different aspect – each building on the previous – starting with ‘Wheels and Things,’ followed by ‘Infrastructure of Things’ and ‘Show Me the Money.’ Throughout the three days delegates will still be able to view live demonstrations and almost 100 papers have been submitted for review. Sessions are divided into seven pathways: #THISisITS: Exhibits and Demos, The Start-Up Zone, Perspectives on Terrorism, ITS University, The Aftermarket, Journey to Journal: Research and Academic papers and Government Policy Vs Business Vs Tech.

“A broad range of pubic, private, academic and research, the backbone of ITS America, will be represented in San Jose. They are all technology innovators, reflecting intelligent transportation’s role in the world of today and tomorrow,” Hopper said.

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ITS New Zealand

NZ supports driverless car trials

6775 ITS New Zealand is enthusiastically supporting its Ministry of Transport’s new guidelines for on-road autonomous vehicle testing. The association’s Cormac McBride says the country has “significant appeal” for trialling because legislation already allows autonomous vehicles on roads, unlike other countries where the law “is struggling to keep up. In addition New Zealand has varied road conditions and is one of the world’s most business-friendly countries”.

The association sees the guidelines as a key step in the Ministry’s 2014-2018 ITS Technology Action Plan to protect road user and vehicle safety.


ITS Romania

Satellite positioning under scrutiny

ITS Romania director-general Mihai Niculescu is working with other European colleagues in the Satellite Positioning Performance Assessment for Road Transport (SaPPART) project, within the European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) programme. SaPPART acknowledges that, while road transport is estimated to represent more than 50% of the satellite-based systems market (75% including smartphone-based mobility services) lack of pan-European certification underpinned by agreed standards is delaying benefits.

SaPPART’s recent White Paper, ‘Better use of Global Navigation Satellite Systems for safer and greener transport’, highlights the “complexity of defining and assessing GNSS performance, which is highly vulnerable to environmental and operational scenarios”.

As a result, the problems of accurate and reliable positioning in challenging conditions are often underestimated. But it concludes that they can successfully be overcome by hybridisation with other positioning sensors and digital maps.


 ITS France

Start-ups on parade in Paris

Seven ITS start-ups demonstrated their wares at the 2016 edition of the association’s Rencontres de la Mobilité Intelligentes (Meeting up on Smart Mobility) event in Paris. The offers included: driverless pods for final journey stages; low-cost carpooling; cross-border EV charging; driver alertness monitoring; intelligent parking location to accommodate electric vehicles and car-sharing; intelligent bike-sharing; and V2V and V2I communication for autonomous vehicles.

Association administrator, Céline Charpentier told ITS International that the success of the venture means “strong possibilities” of a 2017 rerun.


ITS Ireland

Irish bursary to speed research

7075 ITS Ireland is inviting members to help fund annual bursaries for research by high-calibre university students into promising ITS sectors.

Thematic areas include cooperative driving, mobility as a service (MaaS), IT architecture for smart cities and machine learning. Likely figures range from €3600 (US$4000) for a three-month research internship to €24,000 (US$26,600) a year for a master’s or doctoral degree course.

The initiative springs from a 2015 study sponsored by the Arup Trust with a €5,000 (US$5,500) donation. Potential contributors are allowed to partner.



TTS Italia

Freight projects on the move

Progress in major road freight-sector initiatives took centre stage at 4155 TTS Italia’s January 2016 Rome workshop on the country’s National Logistics Platform. Staged jointly with association member UIRNet, charged by the Italian Ministry of Infrastructure and Transport to develop the platform, it featured four projects.

PiCoGe is working on a national ITS architecture for hazardous freight transport, including a national reference point for relevant ITS projects and support for environmental risk calculation. DG Base is progressing a system for monitoring hazardous freight movements combining vehicle tracking data with visual observation.

Port Community System aims to enhance the overall speed and security of freight movement. A truck parking management project is running a trial in the Silician city of Catania.


ITS Associations

Euro associations advising ITS Observatory

The Brussels-based Network of National ITS Associations has gained representation on the advisory panel for the ITS Observatory project, being funded for an initial two years by the EU. It aims to create a central ‘knowledge market’ for ITS data users and providers.

Network chair Roman Srp told ITS International: “We were active during the preparatory stage, and can now act as the primary gateway for national associations.” As vice-president and executive director of ITS Czech Republic and Slovakia, he also sees himself as a link with other Central and Eastern European groups.  

Jennie Martin, general secretary of another panel member, ITS(UK), added: “The Observatory is well placed finally to deliver the on-line ITS information and contact resource which the sector has wanted for over 10 years. I see the panel working with partners on making it a perennial resource.” The Observatory’s first operational release is planned for April 2016.


ITS Sinagapore

Asia-Pac view on AVs

Chin Kian Keong, of the Singapore Autonomous Vehicle Initiative (SAVI), contributed a wider Asia-Pac perspective to the first of 858 ITS Australia’s new series of ITS showcases that are setting the scene for the October 2016 ITS World Congress in Melbourne.

His focus is on equipping the city state with AVs to help overcome   challenges of growing travel demand, an ageing population, labour shortages and constraints on land use.

Singapore currently has several AV test-bedding projects underway; one, using a 10-seater driverless shuttle, being run in cooperation with Nanyang Technological University, where a student chapter of ITS Singapore is now active.



ITS Texas

ITS training in Texas

In 2015, 13 members of the 1858 Texas Southern University student chapter of ITS Texas gained academic awards from on-campus and external grantors.

Students are regularly active in research projects funded by agencies including the US National Sciences Foundation, the US Department of Transportation and the Texas Department of Transportation.

Their work focuses mainly on developing vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) communications: for example, to increase safety and reduce emissions in workzones, and to smooth approaches to intersections against solar glare. 

The students are trialling two V2I systems, one using RFID and the other smartphones, on-road and via simulators.  


6992 ITS South Africa

African expansion in prospect

Prospects for more than doubling Africa’s tally of ITS national associations “in a few years” emerged at a recent workshop hosted in the Namibian capital, Windhoek, by the country’s Road Fund Administration, ITS Africa and ITS South Africa (ITSSA). ITSSA CEO Dr Paul Vorster said “sharing ITS knowledge and lessons learnt in project implementation can assist African countries by driving down costs and maximising ITS benefits”. He saw Botswana, Kenya, Namibia (where a new task force is examining feasibility and timing) and Uganda joining the ranks of ITSSA, ITS Ethiopia and ITS Nigeria.
www.itssa.org

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