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

  • Open-source architecture: closing the standards gap
    May 19, 2023
    Open-source architecture is vital to help accelerate the deployment of new ITS and C/AV solutions, says David Spinney of Econolite Systems. Just so long as we avoid the mistakes of the past…
  • EU to fund common train control system
    April 15, 2015
    The EU's TEN-T Programme is to provide funding of over US$16 million for the development and installation of the common European Train Control System (ETCS) in Belgium, Luxembourg, Denmark and the UK. The new system is expected to improve the interoperability, safety, reliability and capacity on European railways. Seven separate projects aim to contribute to the deployment of the European Rail Traffic Management System (ERTMS) in the EU and enhance interoperability of European rail services. While increa
  • Pan European 24-hour speed enforcement marathon launches
    April 16, 2015
    European Traffic Police Network, TISPOL, has released details of the first pan European 24-hour speed enforcement marathon. In total, 22 countries are taking part in the marathon, starting today, Thursday 16 April at 0600 and continuing to 0600 on Friday 17 April. In the German federal state of North Rhine-Westphalia, where the concept was conceived, members of the public have once again been invited to vote on the locations where they would like speed enforcement measures to take place. TISPOL pre
  • DSRC? ‘It’s become a faith-based thing’
    March 2, 2021
    The US FCC’s decision on 5.9GHz led to Applied Information offering DSRC buybacks to DoTs. Bryan Mulligan tells Adam Hill that we now just need to get on and roll out CV technology...