The future of mobility is going to be driven by services.” That’s the opening position of Paul Campion, CEO of the 
     
Campion was previously with 
     
TSC has been involved in several high-profile projects such as autonomous pod trials but most of its work is less headline-grabbing - although equally important - such as tackling urban congestion. In the UK, as elsewhere, the category of road traffic that has increased most over the past 10 years is vans and light goods, as people increasingly order products online for home or office delivery. 
     
It was also involved in a project which looked at medical deliveries to the University Hospital in Southampton (ITS International, November/December 2018). The hospital receives over 850 deliveries a week, adding considerable pressure to the city’s already congested roads. The project identified that a consolidation centre on the outskirts of the UK city could consolidate deliveries down to 25 a week, removing over 3,300 large vehicles from the centre of Southampton every month.
 
Different legislation
     
Consolidation  is absolutely critical and must be part of the future – the question  is: ‘Who makes money?’ Currently there are hundreds of people paid to  take goods to and from the hospital and a consolidated delivery would  take business away from all but a few of them.
     
He  quotes the UK’s minister for roads, Jesse Norman, saying: “Markets are  social constructs. Don’t ask if they are free or not, ask ‘are they  doing what we want them to do?’” 
     
Campion  adds: “The transport industry is a series of such constructs that  arguably are now not doing what they need to do for the future.” His  favourite example is the different legislation applied to taxis and  private hire. “It is purely a regulatory difference based on technical  limitations and in the past, you had to have a vehicle you could hail on  the street because you didn’t know where the traveller was or where the  taxis were.”
     
However, he  goes on: “
     
That’s  not to suggest Campion is in favour of removing all regulations. He  says, “At the Catapult we spend our time thinking about how that sector  should and could look and how regulations can be drafted to build  markets that will deliver better outcomes given the new technical  capabilities.”
     
This  inevitably leads to the subject of the social impact of driverless cars –  particularly the impact on jobs (as, globally, transport is a major –  if not the biggest - employer of the male workforce). 
     
While  accepting that automation could impact the likes of minicab and taxi  drivers, he does not believe that overall the impact will be as drastic  as it may first appear. The obvious example is driving heavy trucks – a  sector where there is a growing shortage of drivers both in the UK and  elsewhere: “It isn’t a great job and doesn’t attract the younger  generation, so if technology can relieve that pressure it will be a  benefit to companies that can’t recruit drivers, and society.”
 
Customer service
     
He   argues that a lot of jobs are described as driving but many of those   entail far more than simply moving goods or people from A to B, and are   jobs with a driving requirement - take a delivery driver, for example.   “They are really a customer service employee: they have to hand over  the  correct goods to the right people, get the docket signed, collect  the  empties and so on,” he says. “Driving is only part of that job so  even  if the truck drives itself, the ‘driver’ would still have a job.”
     
Another   case in point is a community nurse or care worker who visits sick or   elderly people in their own home and needs to drive from one appointment   to the next. “These people don’t become a nurse or care worker to   drive,” Campion says. 
     
“So   if the car could drive itself it would remove a limitation on the pool   of people who can be employed in that role. Furthermore, the  travelling  time could be spent filling out the paperwork or making  calls to set up  other appointments which would maximise the  individual’s efficiency. At  the moment, all they can do is drive.”
     
He   also adds that when the nurse or care worker is making their visit,   that self-driving car could be used to collect a prescription or get   other supplies. 
     
In a   meeting with the Unite trade union, which represents many drivers, it   became apparent that delivery drivers in London enjoyed the compulsory   switch to night-time freight deliveries during the 2012 Olympic Games.   The streets were clear and they could get the job done quickly and with   the minimum delay and frustration. 
     
He   sees night-time deliveries as a perfect opportunity to alleviate   congestion. “If the heavy goods vehicles are off the road during the day   then 10% of the traffic would disappear but there would be night-time   disruption and disturbance to residents, and that is a problem. This is   where everything starts to converge: if we have consolidation centres   there would be one delivery, not 10, and if we use electric vehicles   they are virtually silent.”
     
 
Congestion decisions
     
Using   technology, we could confine trucks to certain routes to minimise any   disturbance and would also know exactly where each vehicle is at any   given time (if somebody complains that they were woken up at night), he   argues. “Those living alongside these routes may be charged a lower  rate  of council tax to compensate for their potentially disturbed  sleep,”  Campion adds.
     
Feedback   from Londoners was that it was noise from the reversing bleepers,   truck-mounted refrigeration units, tail lifts and roller cages that   disrupted sleep the most.
 
     
“The    techniques and technology are already available. We need to shape the    market so it is to people’s and companies’ advantage to use the ones  we   as a society want them to use,” he goes on.
     
His    view on congestion may surprise many: “Congestion is the way we  ration   access to a resource that is free at the point of delivery.” He    explains: “Spending on roads is justified by the amount of time, and    therefore money, a new or upgraded road will save.” But, he insists,    research says that people would rather take that time-saving and move    further out of town where they can afford a bigger house.
     
“Therefore,    the roads are exactly as congested as the drivers’ decisions about  how   much wasted time they are willing to tolerate and that’s why you  can   never build your way out of congestion,” Campion says. “Statistics  show   that most people are prepared to commute [using one or a  combination of   modes] for about one hour a day. If the people in  driverless vehicles   can spend commuting time doing useful work, they  might not worry if the   journey time is longer and congestion could get  worse. In that case,  the  drivers of normal vehicles will have to  recalculate if they are   prepared to sit it out or if they find a  different way to travel. That’s   the market giving us exactly what we  have designed it to provide.”
Added supercomputers
     
However,      he does not expect autonomous vehicles (AVs) to form a significant      proportion of the vehicle fleet any time soon, pointing out that the      average age of cars being scrapped is almost 14 years and AVs will  be     very expensive because they are “a normal, dumb car with a   supercomputer    added”. Campion also draws a parallel with electric   cars which have,   so  far, failed to take even a double-digit   percentage of the UK’s new   car  market. 
     
In   terms of    reducing congestion and emissions, the load factor – the   average  number   of people in a vehicle, particularly each car - is far   more   significant.  “If we could get that up from 1.2 to 1.5, we   wouldn’t need   to build  another urban road for 20 or 30 years,” he   says but adds the   caveat that  getting strangers to share a car will   not be easy. “I’ve   always said in  the UK it is illegal to talk to   somebody on public   transport but  compulsory to talk to others in the   same car,” he jokes.   “That’s the  problem and it is one we have to   solve.”
 Planning and parking
         
The enormous impact that factors outside the transport sector can have on the way we travel is not lost on Transport Systems Catapult CEO Paul Campion. “It is the government’s plan to build a number of new communities and as we build these communities we must build them for tomorrow, not try to make them a better yesterday,” he says. “If we don’t do anything, then the market will provide big new houses with a garage and offload the transport responsibility onto the local authority which must then build new roads. In doing so we would effectively be tying the residents to a 20th century form of transport.”While    buses,  trains, trams and the like are designed for multiple  occupancy,   cars  are different - so perhaps a compartmentalised taxi  could be one    solution. He also highlights the potential of individual  transport    solutions such as e-bikes and e-scooters, as ways to  increase the    capacity of existing routes.
     Given     the enormous scope of transport-related possibilities new technology    is  now providing, how will he know if he and the TSC have been    successful?  “Our aspirations are that in 10 years’ time we can point to    a number of  UK companies who have pioneered new devices or ways of    doing things and  become internationally successful,” he concludes.    “Personally, I’d like  to make everything better, but if I can make even    one or two things  better, then I’d take that.”
     
As     the current transport systems are the product of countless decisions    by  governments, companies and individuals, it is probable that     improvements will follow a similar step-by-step trajectory.
    
        
        
        
        



