 
    By 2050, the Europe Commission aims to make transport in Europe carbon- and accident-free. Between now and then, however, a significant technological development and deployment effort is needed. Here, Neelie Kroes, European Commission Vice-President for the Digital Agenda, talks about what's being done
In many respects, COOPERS, CVIS and SAFESPOT, set up by the 
     
More than 1,000 people took part in real-life demonstrations by taking minibuses along Amsterdam's roads which used more than 30 cooperative services such as incident-warning and lane-matching applications.
     
The theory was translated into practice however the story does not end there. The particular challenge for the deployment of cooperative systems, according to Neelie Kroes, European Commission Vice-President for the Digital Agenda, is to ensure the timely and widespread availability of in-vehicle equipment, infrastructure communication capabilities and, above all, useful services.
     
"Stakeholders from different administrations and industries with different corporate cultures have to work together closely to make these services a success," she says. "The next phase is launching Field Operational Tests [FOTs] based on the results of COOPERS, CVIS and SAFESPOT to help the fast transfer of research results into innovative services which bring us more efficient, smarter and safer mobility. These tests will give us data from a large number of journeys performed in real-life traffic conditions. This will enable us to assess the value of the different kinds of cooperative systems and to identify business models for the most promising cooperative services."
 
FOTs - a step on
FOTs and pilots are comprehensive socio-economic assessments which help to verify the benefits of cooperative systems and pave the way for bringing these systems to the market.
     
"Tests and pilots have been taking place over the last decade at regional, national and local levels worldwide. We expect these to intensify in the future," Kroes continues. "Therefore, our need to create a harmonised Europe-wide testing environment increases. Stakeholders are well aware that, despite the current economic climate, it is vital to maintain the drive towards sustainable transportation, of which cooperative systems are an integral part. Against this backdrop, the Commission is considering reinforcing and expanding FOTs. We sincerely hope that stakeholders will seize the chances provided by these new instruments." Kroes's mention of the current economic situation is an acknowledgement of the reality behind the aspiration. But, she says, while the financial crisis poses difficulties for all sectors of the economy, and cooperative mobility has not escaped this, this is not the biggest challenge.
     
"We need to find the proper cooperative model, business case and partnerships for cooperative mobility. Dividing applications into Vehicle-to-Vehicle [V2V] and Vehicle-to-Infrastructure [V2I] is somewhat artificial; industry long ago admitted that deploying only V2V solutions would not be viable. The Commission supports technology independence, the CALM [Communications Architecture for Land Mobile environment] set of standards for vehicle communications and the pan-European Communications Architecture for Cooperative Systems, developed by industry, which basically builds on the use of existing communications technologies such as cellular communication.
     
"Deployment is obviously an issue which we are discussing with the industry, our colleagues in the context of the ITS Action Plan and our international partners. I don't see any need today to revise the timetable outlined in the ITS Action Plan. On the contrary, we want to come closer to the deployment of cooperative mobility solutions at a European level through large-scale tests involving several cities and inter-urban corridors. Finally, we highly value the cooperation with European Union [EU] countries in the Easyway project."
 
Extending cooperation
Standardisation at the international level has made  great strides in recent months and years but there are some in the ITS  industry who feel that the remit of the standardisation effort is still  too narrow. Dedicated Short-Range Communication (DSRC) has long been  considered the technology of choice, particularly for safety-critical  cooperative applications, and the EC has harmonised with the US at  5.9GHz. Nevertheless some stakeholders continue to look to alternatives,  such as cellular and 4G/4G+, and are against the mandating of standards  and equipment fitments. The EC has ambitions towards an open  architecture and Kroes points to support at several levels for  standardisation.
     
"We fund  research projects that are contributing significantly to the development  of standards, for example, CVIS, COMeSafety, SAFESPOT, COOPERS, GEONET  and SEVECOM. The European Communications Architecture for Cooperative  Systems for example, coordinated by COMeSafety, has contributed greatly  to the standard architecture approved by ETSI," she continues.
     
"The  Commission has asked the European standardisation organisations to  develop the standards needed for the deployment of ITS Cooperative  Systems (Mandate 453). This sets the scene, and allows funding of  specialist task forces to progress quickly with the required  standardisation.
     
"Commission  services are working closely with the ETSI and 
     
"As  regards the choice of communication technologies, the architecture aims  at being technology-independent. This does not contradict the fact that  the Commission is supporting DSRC for safety-critical applications and  has assured frequency allocation in the 5.9GHz band; technology  independence will ensure that ITS can use any communication means,  depending on the needs of the application. You can use cellular  communications channels (3G, 4G) for data communication for infotainment  applications, or rely on broadcasting technologies to send messages to a  wider geographic area."
 
Getting the relationships right
Realising cooperative systems will involve bringing new  stakeholders into the fold. It will also affect their relative  importance, whether they be new or established players in the  transportation sector.
     
Kroes:  "Many different actors play a role in deploying cooperative  infrastructure - local authorities, national and regional road  authorities, car manufacturers, road operators, telecoms companies,  fleet operators, travellers and so on. When you add electric vehicles,  you must consider additional key players such as power generators,  utility providers, renewable energy providers, electric vehicle OEMs and  charging station operators. These stakeholders may have conflicting  objectives and their role may vary from one service and from one country  to another. For example, in the case of the cooperative infrastructure  for electric vehicles, local and national authorities may have a role  which varies from being an enabler to providing incentives to getting  directly involved in the provision of the charging infrastructure.
Coping with spectrum saturation        
   
 "Cooperative  systems will use a multitude of communication technologies in a variety  of spectrum bands. In the future, all cars will be able to communicate  with each other and the surrounding intelligent infrastructure, and will  also have radars in the 77 and 79GHz bands. Radars will allow cars to  perceive their environment, to detect other vehicles, pedestrians and  vulnerable road users, and any obstacle in their way. No safety system  can work without such sensors.
   
 "The technology which uses the 77 and 79GHz bands is still complicated  and very expensive. Future technological developments will however  overcome these economic limitations.
   
 "Despite this positive development, which is opening up the 77 and 70GHz  bands for wider use, spectrum is becoming an increasingly scarce and  valuable resource. This is particularly true of the lower frequencies  where technology is easier and cheaper. The simple reason for this is  that cars will be connected any time and will need to exchange huge  amounts of data with the infrastructure and each other.
   
 "Use of the available spectrum for communications may therefore increase  so much as to approach saturation. This could force us to use all sorts  of available spectrum sources, including radar. We can therefore expect  that in the future there will be a more intense use of higher bands  such as the 63GHz for short-range as well as long-range communications.  In addition to their prime functionality to monitor the vehicle's  environment for obstacles, radars will also need to carry data. To cope  with the inherent limitation in radar systems' range, different  frequencies may be a possible solution."If  we want to develop an effective business model, each stakeholder must  see a business opportunity in the deployment of cooperative systems and  the related intelligent infrastructure. If they are expected to invest  in cooperative infrastructure, local and national authorities need to  make sure that the other stakeholders will also play their part. I am  well aware that there is a chicken-and-egg problem when each stakeholder  is waiting for the others to invest first. We must work to avoid this  potential standstill.
     
"Taking  this problem into account, the eSafety Forum's Intelligent  Infrastructure Working Group focuses on the road infrastructure aspect  of cooperative systems. It aims to identify the expectations about the  cooperative infrastructure and to achieve a balance between the goals of  the road operators, the various levels of administrations, and the  industry."
Step changes
 In terms of what this means for road network operators  and users, Kroes says that developments have to be viewed over a series  of timescales.
     
"In the long term,  out to the 2050 horizon, our target is accident- and carbon-free  transport in Europe. Across the 27 EU Member States, the goals for 2020,  aligned with the targets of the European Transport Policy 2020, the  Road Safety Action Plan for 2020 and the targets for increasing energy  efficiency and reducing CO2 emissions, are a 20 per cent reduction of  CO2 emissions in road transport and a 50 per cent reduction of road  transport fatalities from 2010 levels.
"These targets would lead us towards an overall concept of smart-connected electro-mobility, which means the wider deployment of electric vehicles and the infrastructure needed to support them, and greater vehicle automation. These three factors are expected to influence road transport infrastructure. Although it may seem slightly different from what we know today, the overall transport picture will probably still be familiar in 2012.
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