Enforcing border controls can create long queues for travellers, David Crawford looks at potential solutions.    
     
Long delays at border crossings in both North America and Europe have sparked the development of new queue visualisation and management technologies that are cutting hours, even days, off international passenger and freight journeys. At the westernmost end of the 2,019km (1,250 mile) Mexico–US frontier, two parallel crossings between Tijuana, in the former country, and the border city of San Diego, in California (the second opening in 2015) are now benefitting from innovative thinking by a frustrated regular user.
     
The earlier implementation has already transformed the world's busiest international port of entry into the San Ysidro district of San Diego. This can experience up to 300,000 northward movements every day, with waiting times as long as three hours, or longer, at peak times.
     
The reason is that the border is heavily physically guarded and policed at the US end to deter illegal entry by undocumented migrants and drug traffickers.
     
Southbound flows have long been less busy; but, since 2015, there have been daily rush hour jams, lasting an hour or more, despite Mexico's lighter controls at a modern, efficient entry port. The change reflects increasing numbers of people commuting between home and work in both directions.
     
Northbound there are several distinct lanes for entering the US, some reserved for travellers carrying electronic documentation; southbound there is a single queue. The US government estimates that the delays have caused annual losses of US$6bn in productivity, commerce and tourism.
The breakthrough came with the launch of the %$Linker:  
The founder, San Diego-based Greg Yova, drew on his  engineering degree  to develop the system in response to the frustrations  he was  experiencing as founder of the Project Mexico charity, which  builds  homes (and recently an orphanage) for the country's poor.
     
Return   journeys into the US for project officials, volunteer workers (15,000   over 20 years) and trucks delivering construction and other materials   (often donated) were fraught with delays.
       
Looking  for an answer, he ruled out conventional traffic sensors on the grounds  that the typical derived displays, using colours on road links on a  digital map, did not deliver the timely and detailed picture of queues  that he wanted, especially in congestion at slow speeds.
     
Again,  available traffic information websites tended to feature  regularly-updated camera stills. “When traffic gets busy, they show a  lot of cars, but you have no idea how fast these are moving”, he told  ITS International. “We looked at live streaming but that has drawbacks –  it’s expensive, bandwidth-hungry, doesn’t play on all mobile devices,  and has security implications.
     
“We  then realised that traffic video doesn’t have to be to-the-second live.  So we update every few minutes, which means that the images are on  average half that number of minutes old - fine for drivers to make  journey decisions.”
The  resulting solution is now installed on both sides of the border, at   the  original crossing and the parallel one from Tijuana to the Otay   Mesa  district of San Diego – enabling drivers to compare the situation   on  each. The system uses output from over 40 cameras, with cellular   modem  connections where the internet is not available.
     
It    involves a 10-second video loop, refreshed at set intervals with the    content validated through time stamps and watermarks. “It works out    roughly 80% cheaper than full live video streaming,” said Yova.
The   system is optimised for cameras supplied by Axis Communications;  but,   he continued, “the software will capture from virtually any  source,  even  legacy analogue ones using an inexpensive transcoder”.  The website   currently attracts over two million page views per month  and the  service  is funded by a 'VIP' fee. A newly-launched app enables  drivers  to input  their specific needs – for example, identifying when  the  waiting time  to enter the US or Mexico is 20 minutes or less –  and  receive a  confirmatory email or text message to a mobile device.  The  underlying  AccuWait proprietary technology uses advanced video   analytics.
     
Border    crossing waiting times have been reduced by 20%. The US Customs and    Border Patrol (CBP) estimates that it is saving at least US$30,000 per    month by scheduling their staff more intelligently. Previously, border    guards were unable to see to the end of the queue to assess its    length.   
     
Other recent   deployments are in domestic queue management systems for US states and   freeways, while Qvision plans to expand its border offer to others of   the ten busiest crossings between the US, Canada and Mexico.
     
Outside   North America, a recent demonstration of Qvision’s 'animated jamcams'   for Transport for London at the Blackwall Tunnel pinch point in east   London, showed, in an accompanying survey, that 96% of respondents   agreed that moving images were more useful. the key outcome was   confirmation that people changed their journey time, route or mode to   avoid the jams.
     
TfL has   now implemented a simplified version of the system and, under the   agency's open data policy, app developers can access five-second looped   videos from available cameras, allowing users to see how traffic is   moving along particular roads.  Yova claims that his technology “helps   level the load on the road network without expensive roadside equipment   or more building”.  
     
Qvision is currently negotiating with other European cities and has just launched a project in India.
In   a European initiative, Estonia-based GoSwift has won the   International   Transport Forum's 2015 Transport Achievement Award for   its speeding up   of freight queues on the border between the Baltic   state and Russia.   Delays could typically last for days, with no   facilities available for   drivers, leading to problems over rest   periods, air pollution, waste and   security.
     
The   system,   installed by the Estonian Ministry of the Interior, is now   operating at   three border crossings on a pay-by-use basis. It allows   the truck  driver  or controller to pre-book a slot or join a virtual   queue.
     
A   truck   travelling from Poland through the Baltic States to Russia on a   fixed   schedule can pre-book its crossing before leaving. The booking  can  be   made up to a month in advance via the internet, by phone to a  call    centre, or at self-service points or cash desks in nearby waiting     areas.     
Alternatively,   a  truck with a short-notice delivery can join a virtual queue and   arrive  at the allocated time. Vehicles carrying perishable loads can   apply to  join a priority virtual queue. An algorithm developed by   GoSwift  allocates slots for the appropriate option. Trucks that arrive   unaware  of the system are directed to a waiting area to book or join a   virtual  queue.
     
Drivers   can check  their place online, or via a self-service terminal in a   waiting area,  and opt to change their slot in response to any   rescheduling  instructions from their base. Trucks in the waiting areas   are called to  the border by SMS and/or display screens when it is  their  turn.  
     
Lengthy   queuing  had been an issue for over 10 years, with freight traffic as   the main  source as well as the impacts on the needs of local  inhabitants  and  tourists. A key driver was the need to improve the  situation  without  the need for major investment in the infrastructure  at the  border  crossings.
     
With   average  queuing times now down to two hours, the Association of  Estonian   International Road Carriers has announced resulting annual  savings for   its members’ of €4 million (US$4.4 million).
     
In    the reverse direction, the system was in pilot operation for 1.5  years   at a single crossing point from Russia, until that country's   government  withdrew financing in early 2014. But, GoSwift sales   director, Madis  Sassiad, told ITS International: “We could restart   within a week.”
     
Founded    in 2011, the company now operates in two additional countries,    Lithuania and Finland. In the latter, mandatory truck booking for the    crossing from Vaalimaa into Russia came into force in a December 2014    trial and continues to operate.
GoSwift's future    ambitions extend to Africa and the Middle East. It is currently working    on overcoming border bottlenecks on long-distance corridors such as  the   New Silk Road project, first proposed in 2013 by Chinese president  Xi   Jinping, which is planned to run from the Pacific Ocean to the  Baltic   Sea. 
 
-  About the author: David Crawford has spent 20 years writing about and researching ITS and is a Contributing Editor to ITS International.         
 
    
        
        
        



