Skip to main content

£40m AV R&D competition launched

Includes feasibility fund for mass transit using self-driving vehicles as alternative to bus or rail
By Adam Hill May 30, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Connected and Automated Mobility R&D competition aims to help commercial roll-out of AVs (© Audioundwerbung | Dreamstime.com)

A £40 million competition has been launched to provide grants to help commercial roll-out of self-driving vehicles across the UK from 2025.

The Connected and Automated Mobility R&D competition has been launched by Zenzic, the Centre for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles (CCAV) and Innovate UK.

They say that the funds will help accelerate a new market for the technology, which could be worth £42 billion to the UK economy by 2035 and create 38,000 new skilled jobs.

It includes £1.5 million funding for feasibility studies into real-life schemes for mass transit using self-driving vehicles on guided routes, as a potential alternative to traditional bus routes or railways.

Types of self-driving vehicles that could be deployed include delivery vans, passenger buses, shuttles and pods, as well as vehicles that move people and luggage at airports and containers at shipping ports.

UK investment minister Lord Grimstone said: "Self-driving vehicles have the potential to revolutionise people’s lives, whether its by helping to better connect people who rely on public transport with jobs, local shops, and vital services, or by making it easier for those who have mobility issues to order and access services conveniently."

Transport minister Trudy Harrison said the "absolute priority is harnessing the technology to improve road safety".

Zenzic's role in the competition will be "dedicated to encouraging collaboration within the ecosystem", says Mark Cracknell, programme director - CAM at the company.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Highways Agency launches A14 consultation
    April 9, 2014
    As a result of the public consultation to consider route options for the A14 Cambridge to Huntingdon improvement scheme, the proposed scheme has been developed in more detail and plans to toll the road have been dropped. Changes that have been made in response to feedback from last year’s consultation include improvements to four junctions on the route and an updated local access road been proposed between two villages. The Highways Agency has now launched a ten-week consultation period, which forms par
  • $49m for innovative ITS projects
    August 12, 2022
    Biden Administration awards cover transport and mobility projects and public transit
  • Verona buses get on board with Conduent contactless technology
    June 19, 2023
    Company continues its roll-outs in Italy with Azienda Trasporti Verona contract
  • C/AV planning turns to business cases, says DfT
    July 9, 2019
    Darren Capes, DfT ITS lead, said projects are working on the business case to understand the benefits of C/AV technologies and what the issues may be. He was speaking at the ITS (UK) Connected Vehicle Forum in Birmingham, where Zenzic - an organisation created by the UK government to accelerate self-driving technology - explained its roadmap to 2030 implementation, summarising co-ordination efforts and project management. If efforts are not coordinated, it may take another 50 years for the technolog