 
         
Over decades, the technology employed in toll collection has been honed to near perfection – automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) and radio frequency identification (RFID) tags are easily within a couple of per cent of infallibility even at highway speeds. 
     
However, technical innovations beyond the confines of the toll road cannot be ignored and at this year’s Annual Technology Summit, the International Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association (
     
To that end, this year’s summit had sessions and streams looking at Mobility as a Service (
     
 
Tech overview
     The final day of the conference saw the culmination of this technical overview with a keynote address by 
     
So what does he see in his crystal ball as the future of transport?  He predicted that autonomous vehicles (AVs), car-pooling and tolling/congestion pricing will totally reshape and transform transportation - although he declared himself something of a sceptic in regard to AVs. While acknowledging that self-driving cars are inevitable, he believes they may be many decades away from being commercially viable and he posed the audience this question: how would you like to live in a world where it takes 100 million miles for a single car fatality? “We are already there, in the US at least,” he retorted. “Which is why it is so difficult to make a self-driving car, because it has to have a fatality rate lower than one for every 100 million miles. It will happen, but I don’t know when.”
 
Satellite tolling
     He  believes that modern technology has already made it easier to pay tolls  and that satellite tolling makes it easy to impose tolls on an enormous  number of roads. “So instead of paying one large charge such as corridor  pricing in Stockholm or area pricing in London, you can have tolls  literally on every street and the cost of each toll can be adjusted to  dissipate congestion.”  
     
Schwarz  called it “ubiquitous congestion pricing” and predicted:  “We will be  paying a lot of congestion charges for each journey.”
     
He  identified Singapore’s 2020 deadline for all cars to be equipped for  satellite tolling and emphasised that there is no need for roadside  infrastructure. He also pointed out that many new cars come with SIM  cards and GPS fitted as standard, saying: “All that is missing is the  toll transponder.”
     
Currently  Schwarz is trying to assemble a working party to draw up global  standards for satellite toll transponders. “That would be a game-changer  for transportation – it would make tolls feasible, viable and easy.”  
     
Politically  the tolling of almost every street may prove difficult but he sees his  third technology – car-pooling - as a way to ease that transition: “Once  you have congestion charging, car-pooling becomes far more attractive.  Splitting the congestion charge three ways makes it more affordable.”
     
His  reasoning was that for each commuter there may be 10, 20 or even 50  potential carpool partners but in a metropolitan area of five million  they are hard to identify and that’s been the problem. “Now the  technology to easily find a suitable carpool candidate is becoming  available,” he suggests. “More people will carpool, there will be less  traffic and fairly steep congestion charges in many metropolitan areas.”
     
 
‘Who’s Zoomin’ Who?’
     While  reiterating that without congestion pricing self-driving cars will  create gridlock, he said that when they do arrive, AVs will also be  pooled and in doing so blur the line between private and public transit.
 
Schwarz then joined the ‘Who’s Zoomin’ Who?’ panel where Brennan Hamilton, senior product manager with
Ford will start fitting connected vehicle technology in all its cars in the US this year, will roll out connected Vehicle to Everything (C-V2X) in China 2021 and do the same in the US in 2022. While doing so he also reassured his audience that G5 modems and dedicated short-range communications (DSRC) “can co-exist better than two DSRC systems”.
     
Answering  a  question about the public’s reluctance to move away from vehicle   ownership towards new mobility methods he said: “When they experience   the freedom of not having to meet a lease car payment every month and   just ordering up a car to go somewhere whenever they want, I think   people will quickly adopt that model.” 
     
Hamilton   added that Ford will start deploying self-driving cars in 2020.   However, in answer to a question from ITS International about measures   to prevent Level 5 cars being used by those with ill intent, he said:   “Level 5 is a long way off - we will learn along the way”. 
     
 
Real-world testing
     Another   panellist was Michael Noblett, CEO of the 
     
prepare for self-driving vehicles, he said current vision systems used by AVs work best   on roads with good markings and signs. “But you can’t design a vehicle   that only works in a perfect environment, you have to design it for  the  worst-case scenario,” he insisted. 
 
Regarding the current state of on-board technology, he said: “At this point I would say these systems marginally improve safety.”
In reply to a question about the timeline for congestion charging and why there was such a slow uptake on car-pooling, Schwarz started by highlighting his definition of car-pooling as a driver who is making a journey taking others - potentially strangers - heading in the same direction. While this is often done in return for some financial recompense he clarified that “
Uber cost
     But   he added:  “Congestion charging and car-pooling are both linked and   inevitable.”  His rationale was that with the Uber and Lyft model the   cost per mile  is a little over $2 - while for somebody driving   themselves the cost  (including depreciation, insurance and fuel) is   around $0.50 mile. 
     
So for the individual, the economics of Uber is unfavourable - unless parking is expensive. 
     
Even    if the average for Uber Pool is two people per vehicle, the cost will    be a little over $1/mile per person – still much more expensive than    driving. As he sees it: “Ubers are plentiful if parking is scarce and    Ubers are scarce if parking is plentiful. If you want a price point  that   is below the cost of driving [to divert people from driving], you    cannot use a model such as Uber or Lyft.”
     
Returning    to what he considers genuine car-pooling, he gave this example: “I am    driving to work (or autonomously) and somebody else is going the same    direction and I give them a lift, so the cost is instantly halved and    this is far cheaper than Uber or Lyft.” 
     
Currently,    however, for a 10-mile commute where the employer provides parking,   the  cost for the employee is $5 ($4 for a Prius) so making a couple of    bucks along the way to pick up somebody else “is not worth the hassle”    unless it is a 20- or 30-mile journey. 
     
“However,    if you implement congestion charging, the 10-mile drive takes only 15    minutes instead of 40 - but it costs $15 in congestion charges plus  the   $5 for fuel et cetera, taking the total to $20. Now I am willing  to  pick  up ‘Joe’ along the route for, say, $12. ‘Joe’ is happy to pay  me  $12  because if he drives himself, it will cost him $20.”
 
Congestion charging
 
      While     acknowledging that this will be politically difficult to sell to the     public, Schwarz argued that it is inevitable, and that car sharing     technology would make such a move more acceptable to the travelling     public.  
     
“Congestion     charging is a wonderful way of raising revenue,” he said, adding that it     was self-regulating. “The cost of tolls will be exactly the same as    the  value of the time saved. You have given people some of their time    back  but taken some money from them. Nobody will miss the traffic     congestion.”
     
Despite the     political difficulties in implementing such a policy, Schwarz  believes    it will happen relatively quickly although he cannot predict  when it    will start. “It will only take one forward-looking or  extremely    cash-strapped authority to implement congestion charging.  Once that    happens in one city, everybody else will see the money they  are making    and the lack of congestion - making it a better place to  live. Other    will soon follow.”
     
Having     broadened the focus for this year’s Technology Summit, the message  to    IBTTA members appears to be that the future has never been  brighter  for   their sector. However, members must proactively engage  with the  changes   that are happening outside the boundaries of their  concession  or risk   missing out on the potential rewards.
 
     
         
         
        



