Skip to main content

Abertis simulates satellite road user charging in Germany and Spain

Munich and Barcelona will see tests of new traffic demand management platform
By Adam Hill April 20, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
A drone-eye view of Munich (© Aleksej Bergmanis | Dreamstime.com)

A new urban mobility project aims to develop digital tools to simulate a satellite pay-per-use tolling system in Germany and Spain.

Abertis Mobility Services (AMS) is part of the consortium testing in the low-emission zones (LEZ) of Munich and Esplugues de Llobregat in the Barcelona metropolitan area.

The company will implement the simulated satellite road usage charging solution, handling back-office management and the development of an app - something AMS has experience of in the US states of Washington, Utah, Oregon and Virginia through its subsidiary Emovis.

This system allows drivers to pay for their actual use of the road, with an exact calculation of the distance they have driven. City authorities will use the simulation to work out real traffic demand management strategies.

The platform will operate with a fixed fee to access the cities' LEZ, and a variable fee depending on the number of kilometres travelled, level of usage and congestion at the time of access. 

Financed by the European Union's EIT Urban Mobility, which is part of the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT), the project seeks to promote connected mobility, and expand shared transport and active travel. 
 
AMS is a partner of Immense, a project seeking ways to discourage and reduce car use in urban areas, and to boost more sustainable transport.
 
The solution will be piloted for two months - from September to November 2023 - with around 1,000 citizens, testing scenarios where congestion is reduced by 10% (Esplugues de Llobregat) and 25% (Munich) depending on the availability of alternative routes within the affected areas.

Immense aims to make it possible to free up at least 10% of public space for the use of shared transport and active travel modes, due to better use of existing infrastructure and increased revenues from dynamic fares.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Conduent goes with the flow in Venice
    December 28, 2022
    Firm works with Elavon and Visa to provide payments for Azienda Veneziana della Mobilità
  • ITF releases projections for modal shares, emissions
    December 4, 2014
    New projections, released today by the International Transport Forum (ITF) at the OECD during the COP20 climate change negotiations in Lima, Peru, highlight a critical choice for policy makers: whether to pursue urbanisation based on public transport or on private transport with cars and two-wheelers. Big cities in China, India and Latin America with over 500,000 inhabitants will more than double their share of world passenger transport emissions by 2050 to 20 per cent (2010: 9 per cent), if current urba
  • Dynniq’s FlowSense gives green light for city mobility
    March 19, 2019
    Putting an end to traffic jams – including those involving freight - and improving the air people breathe are major goals for city authorities everywhere. With FlowSense, Dynniq thinks it may have some answers. Adam Hill asks how Sitting in traffic is top of the list of many commuters’ pet hates: a necessary evil, perhaps. But at least it doesn’t kill you - the same can’t be said of toxins in the air. Indeed, the World Health Organisation estimates that 4.2 million deaths worldwide are due to outdoor pol
  • Estonia adopts digital transport model
    January 25, 2022
    Model is expected to incorporate continuously updated data for 130,000 road sections