Skip to main content

5G transport research projects get EU backing

Trials aimed at paving way for large-scale deployment of 5G corridors
By Adam Hill June 17, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
5G-Blueprint is one of three connected and automated mobility projects (© 5G-Blueprint)

Research on 5G ecosystems for connected and automated mobility (CAM) along three new European cross-border corridors will begin in September.

Each new project will provide a 5G network infrastructure for varied means of transport, including cars, trucks, trains and pods.

For example, 5G-Blueprint will investigate how real-time data exchange from and to vehicles – and between terminals and vehicles and between vehicles and control rooms - can help boost efficiency in the logistics supply chain.

It will look at how uninterrupted, 5G-based, cross-border tele-operated transport for roads and maritime based between the ports of Antwerp (Belgium) and Vlissingen (Netherlands) would work.

Meanwhile, 5GMed will test use cases for CAM, including road and rail, using 5G network infrastructure along the Figueras-Perpignan cross-border corridor. 

Finally, 5G-Routes will look at something similar on 150km of the Via Baltica corridor, with a ferry extension to Helsinki, “covering several scenarios in automated cooperative, awareness and sensing driving”. 

They are among 11 new European Union-backed Horizon 2020 projects which form part of the European 5G Public-Private Partnership (5G-PPP).

The EU says the latest round of cash means it has put more than €400 million into the 5G-PPP trial project portfolio, added to which is €1 billion of private investment in 5G vertical trials.

Large-scale deployment of 5G corridors is anticipated in Europe, with the EU viewing 5G infrastructure as a “key enabler for the development of CAM, providing a broad range of digital services to the vehicle and paving the way to fully-autonomous driving by the end of the decade on specific sections of roads equipped with 5G”. 

5G-enabled CAM will improve road safety and reduce congestion and CO2 emissions, thus creating more sustainable infrastructure and contributing to Europe’s Green Deal of December 2019.

EU 5G map
(Source: European Commission)

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Great (shared) mobility expectations
    December 19, 2024
    An invitation to attend Movmi's Shared Mobility Fall Masterclass changed the way Adam Hill looked at micromobility - in particular his own attitude to risk
  • Russia's high speed toll link - aims and opportunities
    July 31, 2012
    Construction of a new toll link between the Russian capital of Moscow and the country's second-largest city, the port of St Petersburg, is due to start in 2012. Here, ITS International takes look at the project to date and the opportunities for foreign companies to get involved. The construction of a new toll link between the Russian capital Moscow and the country's second-largest city St Petersburg has a number of aims. It will lead to the creation of a high-speed vehicular link between the two which will
  • The world was your Oyster
    November 5, 2021
    Embracing digital payments and transparent journey planning is key to changing traveller behaviour and accelerating integrated public transport, says Martin Howell of Worldline
  • Cognitive boss on AV safety: ‘It’s about human life, not just big money’
    March 3, 2020
    Olga Uskova, founder and president of Russia-based Cognitive Technologies, puts herself in the hotseat with ITS International to answer questions about advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS), dominating the global market – and, of course, The Beatles…