The Chinese government is turning to ITS to help solve urban traffic congestion in the majority of its large cities. Eugene Gerden reports.    
     
China is investing an estimated 3.5bn yuan ($551 million) per year in ITS and while the country’s current economic strategy may see this decline, the government plans to continue active development of the national intelligent transport system.
     
A Chinese Ministry of Transport (CMoT) spokesman said the development of ITS in the country will continue in accordance with the existing state program: The development of transportation sector in China during the period of 2012-2020. 
     
According to Hong Xiaofeng, deputy director of the Department of Science and Technology for CMoT, amid the country’s ever-growing number of cars, the government plans more active use of smart transport technologies to optimise the traffic network and lower carbon emissions. 
     
Underlining the importance of implementation of these plans is a CMoT that forecasts the number of cars in the country will exceed 200 million by 2020. 
     
Wang Xiaojing, chief engineer at the Research Institute of Highways (part of CMoT) said the initial stage includes plans to install electronic road signs on the streets of the largest cities. He added that these installations will show data collected through the use of intelligent traffic technologies. 
 
As ITS International went to press, CMoT was  completing the integration of new electronic toll collection (ETC)  systems enabling free-flow tolling on the highways in Shanghai and other  large cities. 
     
According  to Li Zheliang, deputy director of the Shanghai Road Administration’s  road network monitoring centre, the city now has more than 220,000  vehicles using the ETC service with about 80,000 cars being equipped  with the device every year since 2009.
The introduction of new ITS technologies is planned to take place in  cooperation with foreign partners – one example being Chinese  telecommunications equipment and network solutions supplier ZTE. It has  signed a 1.2bn yuan (US$186 million) deal with Ruselectronics, one of  Russia’s leading electronics organisations, for the supply of Russian  ITS solutions for the Chinese transport system and local transport  infrastructure. 
     
Among the new products are an ‘intelligent antenna  system’ and other ‘Smart City’ technologies. 
     
According  to Wu Zhongze, head of the China Intelligent Transportation Systems  Association, last year the total value of the Chinese ITS market was 100  billion yuan (US$16 billion). The Chinese government has already  planned and implemented the installation of ITS on the country’s 12,000  mile high-speed railway network.
 
The  planned volume of investments in ITS has not  been disclosed but the  majority of funding is expected to come from  state sources, with private  investors providing the rest. To that end,  the Chinese government has  announced its plans to create conditions  more conducive to private  investments in the ITS field and to entice  the country’s leading IT  vendors to design new ITS systems for the  country’s transport sector. 
     
Currently,   the leading ITS solutions providers in China include local companies   United Electronics, Qiming Information Technology, Navinfo, Wanda Zixun   and China Transinfo. There are also plans to attract Western vendors   like German software company 
     
However,   analysts of the China Intelligent Transportation Systems Association   say further development of China’s ITS market may be hampered by the   lack of necessary infrastructure and a potential shortage of investments   due to the beginning of the economic recession in China. 
     
China   has been investing an estimated 3.5bn yuan ($551 million) in ITS   annually but the country’s current economic decline may see this level   of investment fall significantly this year.  
 
CMoT also plans to install ITS applications on smartphones (particularly those produced by Chinese manufacturers such as 
 
 About the Author: Eugene Gerden is an international freelance writer, based in St. Petersburg, who specialises in current affairs.    
 
    
        
        



