Skip to main content

PTV opens software to Ukraine aid

Firm is giving free route planning expertise to humanitarian convoys after Russia invasion
By Adam Hill March 9, 2022 Read time: 3 mins
Haas; 'As PTV we have very strong values, you know, like fairness, diversity - and obviously, freedom' (© Steve Allen | Dreamstime.com)

PTV Group has opened up its software products for free to organisations which are planning routes to deliver convoys of humanitarian aid - or transport of refugees - to and from Ukraine, following the country's invasion by Russia.

"One of the obvious things we can do with our product portfolio, and the services we generally deliver to customers in the logistics piece, is around route optimisation and route planning," the company's CEO Christian Haas told ITS International.

"To give you an example: if you want to supply goods to five different locations, that already results in about 120 different solutions and possible routes to take - and I think our tools are perfect in order to help those people in those situations. So we very quickly made the decision that we give the software and the services - because it does require some services around it as well - for free to those organisations and actually we already had quite a few asking for help and starting to use it."

PTV has created a landing page for organisations which are interested in using its software and has formed a task force at its head office in Karlsruhe, Germany, to concentrate on handling requests. The company has not yet revealed who has taken up the offer.

"In a nutshell, the software helps to distribute goods in the best possible way among the available vehicles," Haas continues. "Many of those organisations have plenty of vehicles, so we can perform milk runs for the consolidation of goods - and then we obviously optimise those routes for the trucks and that saves time and kilometres as well."

There is also a service element to PTV's free offer, giving expertise along with the software. "If it's too difficult to implement the software quickly, or they can't do it for whatever reason, then we just help them - basically, by them telling us what they want to do and we do it for them in our software and just pass the results over to them."

Haas emphasises that PTV is not a political organisation. However, he adds: "But I, as Christian Haas, have a very strong opinion and generally as PTV we have very strong values, you know, like fairness, diversity - and obviously, freedom. And I do think that as a chief executive officer, that also means that you have to stand with your opinion. And if you have a strong opinion and you can take some influence - it's very tiny, obviously - but then you have to do it, especially in situations like that."

PTV will be involved "as long as we need to", he concludes.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The real case for driverless mobility
    May 13, 2024
    What will automated driving really be good for? Bern Grush of Urban Robotics Foundation offers his thoughts on the big issues around its implementation - and suggests a newly-published book might point the way forward
  • Bright shiny green future: Asecap Sustainability Forum
    August 30, 2023
    Knowing your company’s carbon footprint is one thing, but the real issue is understanding and reporting to investors Scope 3 emissions. David Arminas reports from the 2nd Asecap Sustainability Forum in Vienna, Austria
  • To charge or not to charge, that is the question
    January 26, 2018
    Alan Dron looks at why congestion charging and other similar schemes are so controversial in North America. In August, Andrew Cuomo, governor of New York State, described congestion charging for the city as “an idea whose time had come,” according to the Bloomberg wire service. In October, he announced a ‘Fix NYC’ advisory panel to study methods of easing congestion on the city’s streets. Although Cuomo did not specifically mention congestion charging when setting up the panel, he said it would study
  • New software aids traffic studies
    January 7, 2013
    New software from the PTV Group enables users to carry out traffic studies necessitated by planned housing schemes or shopping centre construction, which could have a substantial influence on traffic management. According to PTV, its PTV Vistro software simplifies traffic studies and allows users to quickly create networks, while at the same time enabling them to optimise traffic signals. The user can specify the geometry of the network, add data from traffic counts and specify traffic control rules for in