 
    ITS associations from three European countries shared ambitious plans for Cooperative ITS (C-ITS) during a presentation at Intertraffic. 
         
Martin Russ from 
     
ITS Norway’s Trond Hovland highlighted roles for C-ITS in Nordic conditions, citing live tests with vehicles acting as early sensors of slippery road states and alerting following traffic at least 1km ahead of a danger spot – as well as alerting maintenance crews.
     
Finally, Roman Srp, network chair and executive director of ITS Czech Republic and Slovakia, introduced the first Czech C-ITS project, BaSIC. The project is testing systems for giving alerts of stationary and slow-moving vehicles, approaching emergency responders, traffic jams and roadworks. The country’s ambition, he said, was to become “one of the frontrunners in EU C-ITS activity”.
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     ITS UK    
     
Countries boasting that legal autonomous vehicles will become a regular feature on their roads within the next few years are straying “far from the case”, 
     
In an informal briefing of the House of Commons (Lower House) Transport Select Committee, a high-profile delegation stressed the “numerous obstacles” standing in the path of achieving such claims.
     
Before being able to deploy autonomous vehicles together with conventional ones on any national road network, crucial issues such as standards, legality, safety, assurance and reliability need to be addressed. Although the UK autonomous vehicle industry has many “good stories to tell”, it also acknowledges the significant barriers that need to be overcome, the parliamentarians heard.
Developments in connected and automated vehicle technology were among  highlights at 
     
Justin Passaportis,  of GoGet CarShare updated members on the Australian Driverless Vehicle  Initiative, which has its national centre of excellence based in the  city.
     
Driverless vehicles, he said, would reduce the  role of human error in road crashes, which cost the Australian economy  AUS$27bn (US$20.5bn) a year, and levels of congestion, which costs it  AU$30bn (US$23bn) a year.
     
Dr Paul Gray, chief  executive of Adelaide-based 
     
This can detect, for example,  the risk of rear-end  collisions between buses coming off the city’s O-bahn guided busway,  onto mixed-traffic streets, and other buses already there - and warn  drivers accordingly. The system also monitors following distances.
     
 
     EU’s eCall helped  on its way        
         
 
     
The EU requires all new  cars bought in Member States from April 2018 to be equipped with the  system which will automatically dial for emergency aid after a  collision. In preparation for drafting the new Belgian regulations the  association set up a dedicated working group, leading a public  consultation process to develop early policy documentation and  organising systematic feedback on the proposed legislative content. It  has also contributed to the accreditation and compliance process for the  provision of eCall equipment and services, which it believes will make  the new law operational earlier than might otherwise have been the case.
     
Trials  have taken place at the Belgian eCall pilot site in the Greater  Brussels area, using existing software and operational systems as far as  possible.
     
Royal assent for the enabling law is expected in summer 2016.
 
 
     
         
         
         
        



