Skip to main content

Drive Sweden looks to improve rural transport

Drive Sweden is to facilitate seven projects focused on improving rural transport and using artificial intelligence to improve traffic flows.
By Ben Spencer March 18, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Drive Sweden facilitates projects aimed at improving rural transport and traffic flows (© Mikael Damkier | Dreamstime.com)

Drive Sweden is a consortium of 140 partners in which members like 2getthere, Atkins and Dynniq collaborate on developing transport solutions for people and goods.

A project involving the county of Västerbotten, KTH Royal Institute of Technology and Einride will seek to address future transport systems for sparsely-populated areas through autonomous, electric and on-demand controlled vehicles and drones.

RISE (Research Institutes of Sweden) and the Swedish Transport Administration will collaborate on a similar initiative which seeks to investigate the conditions under which AVs can offer more attractive public transport in the countryside.

DELTA – a pilot for on demand-controlled public transport with smaller vehicles – will aim to study the changes in people's behavioural patterns around shared vehicles. Partners include Kista Science City, Keolis and Ericsson.

Meanwhile, Swarco will work with data provider Viscando and the municipality of Uppsala to show how new types of sensors and traffic management models, combined with AI, can help improve accessibility and safety in signal controlled intersections.

In a separate trial, automotive provider Veoneer, CEVT (China Euro Vehicle Technology) and Volvo cars will study how sensors on connected vehicles can contribute to a better picture of the current traffic situation.

Additionally, public transport agency Västtrafik will work with K2 (the Swedish centre of public knowledge for public transport) and Malmö University to better understand how electrically divided AVs can affect and supplement transport.

A Stockholm virtual city project involving technology company Univrses and Taxi Stockholm will utilise cameras on a fleet of vehicles to collect information that can be complied into a digital copy of the city.

 

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ITSWC 2021: New solutions for the new normal
    September 20, 2021
    October’s ITS World Congress in Hamburg will profile the changing face of mobility, with real-world examples of electric vehicle implementation, shared transport and autonomy taking centre stage
  • GPS delivers accurate journey time data for UTC
    January 27, 2012
    A new solution developed as a consequence of the UK's Freeflow project fuses GPS and UTC loop data to give more accurate predictions of journey times, benefting network managers and travellers alike. By Matt Cowley and Gareth Jones, Trakm8 and John Polak and Rajesh Krishnan, Imperial College London
  • Smarter mapping makes for more informed decisions
    December 2, 2016
    Following his keynote presentation at the 2016 ITS World Congress in Melbourne, ITS International caught up with Esri founder Jack Dangermond. It is getting close to half a century ago that Jack Dangermond and his wife Laura founded the Environmental Research Systems Institute – known today as Esri - of which he remains president.
  • Intelligent intersection control
    April 12, 2013
    Intelligent intersection control systems have a growing role to play in making urban traffic more efficient. Robin Meczes reports. The idea of every traffic light turning green as you approach it has long been a dream for many an urban driver – and none more so than those driving heavy goods vehicles (HGVs), which are slow and difficult to bring to a halt and then accelerate back to normal travel speed. But that dream has become a reality for some drivers in a small number of cities around Europe in the las