Skip to main content

NACTO releases ‘blueprint’ for AVs in cities

Autonomous vehicles (AVs) must be part of future transport policies which prioritise efficiency and fairness, according to senior transport executives in the US and Canada. The second edition of the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO)’s Blueprint for Autonomous Urbanism sets out what it calls “the concrete steps that will need to be taken to ensure an equitable, people-first city”. NACTO is a collection of 81 North American cities and transit agencies which exchange ideas and coo
September 13, 2019 Read time: 2 mins
Autonomous vehicles (AVs) must be part of future transport policies which prioritise efficiency and fairness, according to senior transport executives in the US and Canada.


The second edition of the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO)’s %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external Blueprint false https://nacto.org/publication/bau2/ false false%> for Autonomous Urbanism sets out what it calls “the concrete steps that will need to be taken to ensure an equitable, people-first city”.

NACTO is a collection of 81 North American cities and transit agencies which exchange ideas and cooperate on national transport issues and its policy recommendations are aimed in part at improving transit using driverless technologies.

But the new document warns that “merely shifting from current to autonomous technologies will not be enough to address the climate and safety challenges that we face or to address long-standing racial and socio-economic inequities”.

It adds: “Instead, the autonomous future must be guided by thoughtful, bold, transformative public policy and street design practice that reduces driving and vehicle miles travelled and offers mobility and opportunity to everyone, not just those in cars.”

The Blueprint insists that there is no point introducing driverless technology unless there is also “a comprehensive overhaul of how our streets are designed, allocated and shared”.

Cities should prioritise kerbside uses and modes that serve the most people in the most sustainable fashion: “Buses, para-transit, and other surface transit, which are the most efficient way to move people, come first.”

There should also be a commitment to high-quality on-street transit, with technologies such as computer-aided dispatch and automatic vehicle location systems used “to improve efficiency and create services that attract riders”.

While AVs could make driving “easier and cheaper” than today, “absent policy mechanisms and incentives to encourage people to use the most efficient modes, traffic and pollution, already at crippling levels in many cities, will continue to increase”.

Congestion pricing is ‘crucial’ to influencing travel behaviour, the document suggests.

“City governments must work rapidly to change how street space is designed and allocated before yesterday’s values become enshrined in tomorrow’s concrete,” said Corinne Kisner, executive director of NACTO. “Taking proactive steps now means a future where people come first in an autonomous age.”

Related Content

  • Battery bottleneck: EV roll-out at risk
    June 17, 2019
    In order for the take-up of electric vehicles – a key part of the future mobility mix - to grow, we need batteries. And that might prove tricky, reports Graham Anderson Industry and commodities experts fear that the growth in electric vehicles (EVs) could be much slower than predicted due to bottlenecks in global battery market supply chains. “People seem to think that the switch from the internal combustion engine to electric vehicles just means you plug your car in rather than fill it with petrol,” a
  • Canada invests in Vancouver’s EV charging infrastructure
    February 15, 2019
    The government of Canada is investing CAN$300,000 in the construction of six electric vehicle (EV) fast chargers in Vancouver. This funding is part of the government’s CAN$182.5m investment to develop a fast-charging network for EVs and establish natural gas stations along roads and hydrogen stations in metropolitan areas. The chargers are partially funded through the Electric Vehicle and Alternative Fuel Infrastructure Deployment Initiative, a programme which falls under Canada’s $180 billion Inves
  • Fostering ITS Policy and the IRF manifesto
    November 26, 2012
    Fostering ITS Policy, an international workshop jointly organised by TTS Italia (National Association for Telematics for Transport and Safety) and the IRF Policy Committee on ITS, aims to bring together key partners from the public, private and academic sectors in Italy to discuss ITS policy frameworks and developments in ITS university education. The workshop takes place as part of the New World Conference The New World II, the ITS for mobility management convention in Bologna on 5 December 2012 at Savoia
  • NKM Mobilities installs Tritium fast chargers in Hungary
    July 18, 2018
    NKM Mobilitas will install 12 of Tritium’s Veefil-RT 50kW DC fast chargers along main traffic routes in Hungary during the second half of 2018. The roll-out is part of a wider ambition to establish a charging network throughout the country. The company is a subsidiary of National Utilities, the state Hungarian provider which supplies gas and electricity to households in the country. NKM Mobilitas plans to work with local governments and municipalities to implement 100 e-chargers across Hungary by the