Skip to main content

USDoT releases V2X roll-out roadmap

Hope is that tech will reduce "crisis of US roadway deaths" which sees 40,000 fatalities a year
By Adam Hill August 19, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Plan will accelerate investment and R&D in V2X 'market certainty' (© Karsten Neglia | Dreamstime.com)

US Department of Transportation (USDoT) has released a roadmap for the US nationwide roll-out of Vehicle to Everything (V2X) technology.

Saving Lives with Connectivity: A Plan to Accelerate V2X Deployment was initially released in draft form for public comment in October 2023, and has now been finalised.

US secretary of transportation Pete Buttigieg called it a "key milestone" and said: "The Department recognises the potential safety benefits of V2X, and this plan will move us closer to nationwide adoption of this technology.”

ITS America president and CEO Laura Chace commented: "USDoT’s enthusiastic support for V2X adoption provides clear guidance to stakeholders for continued V2X development, investment, and deployment. ITS America applauds the Department on the release of this critical roadmap, and would particularly like to thank the strong leadership of secretary Buttigieg, the Federal Highway Administration, and the ITS Joint Program Office for their work in advancing innovation that will save lives."

V2X deployment will be a key component of the Safe System Approach adopted by the USDoT’s National Roadway Safety Strategy in January 2022 to address what USDoT calls "the crisis of roadway deaths": upwards of 40,000 people a year die on US roads.

“The plan was drafted and advanced with collaboration across public and private partnerships," said USDoT principal deputy assistant secretary for research and technology and chief scientist Dr. Robert C. Hampshire.

"It provides stakeholders with vital information to enable a safe, efficient, and sustainable transportation system through the national, widespread deployment of interoperable V2X technologies. The plan will accelerate investment, research, and deployment in V2X 'market certainty'."

Responsibilities for roll-out will be shared among Federal agencies, infrastructure owner-operators and private industry.

The Federal Highway Administration recently announced nearly $60 million in grants to authorities in Arizona, Texas and Utah to promote the deployment of V2X technologies. FHA administrator Shailen Bhatt called the USDoT plan a "call to action in providing a framework for all of us to continue to work together toward the same goal of accelerating V2X deployment to save lives on our nation’s roadways".

Related Content

  • FHWA makes emergency $3m available for Hawaii traffic management
    August 23, 2023
    Money will be used for infrastructure repairs following devastating wildfires on Maui
  • Road ahead for infrastructure investment
    December 9, 2021
    Find out what’s in store for state DOTs as they plan their future investments in projects ranging from roads to rail to transit to ferries. Start your Friday morning off from 09:30 to 10:45 in East Wing E217, with the State DOT Roundtable. This annual executive level session will focus on the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA). There will be two roundtable panels: the first will address policy issues while the second will focus on implementation.
  • USDOT releases ITS Strategic Plan
    February 20, 2015
    The US Department of Transportation has released its ITS Strategic Plan 2015-2019, outlining its plans for the future of intelligent transportation systems (ITS) research. Some highlights of the plan include program categories, which provide the structure for research, development, and adoption of its technologies, including connected vehicles, automation, emerging capabilities, enterprise data, interoperability and accelerating deployment.
  • USDOT releases new fact sheet on planning for the future of CVs and ITS
    June 12, 2015
    The US Department of Transportation (USDOT) has developed a new fact sheet to encourage planning agencies to consider how their local transportation systems will function in a connected vehicle environment.