Skip to main content

Passport brings traffic management platform to the UK

UK drivers ‘rack up’ more than £570m in fines each year, according to an independent study conducted by US mobile payment company Passport. The firm has opened an office in London and is offering a platform which it says aims to boost traffic management in cities. Called Passport Platform, the solution is intended to connect multiple modes of transportation and payments and provide a way for cities to understand, manage and collaborate with an ecosystem of mobility services. Adam Warnes, vice presid
September 21, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
UK drivers ‘rack up’ more than £570m in fines each year, according to an independent study conducted by US mobile payment company Passport. The firm has opened an office in London and is offering a platform which it says aims to boost traffic management in cities.


Called Passport Platform, the solution is intended to connect multiple modes of transportation and payments and provide a way for cities to understand, manage and collaborate with an ecosystem of mobility services.

Adam Warnes, vice president of UK operations at Passport, says the company’s focus is to give local authorities, cities, rural authorities one source of data which will allow them to make smarter decisions to reach their goals for easing congestion, promoting sustainable transport or air quality.

Passport’s research shows 83% of drivers say parking machines do not work when they need them. Five out of ten, of the UK councils that responded reveal that they have parking problems in their cities. Also, illegal parking is on the increase and 27% of UK councils say the rise of new modes of transport such as rideshares and dockless cycles are causing problems.

“Dockless bikes came in overnight and have created a huge amount of problems for local authorities with bikes being dumped and with no one having an understanding of usage, ownership or licensing,” Warnes adds.

Passport has also found out that a third of councils suffer from inadequate funding for their parking and public transportation programmes.

Warnes believes congestion is at an ‘all time high’ and drivers are becoming more frustrated at the competition for kerbside space.

“We want to equip those responsible for planning, managing and enforcing parking and public transportation with a scalable platform that meets the needs of commuters while improving back-office efficiencies for councils.”

Passport has been working with Westminster City Council via its %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external ParkRight false https://www.westminster.gov.uk/parkright false false%> app since 2017. According to Warnes: “From Westminster's point of view, ParkRight enabled them to interact with customers to understand their travel and buying behaviour and use of their space in congestion.”

Khristian Gutierrez, chief revenue officer at Passport, says the company’s goal is to partner with cities: “We don't see the city or the council as a means to get to the end user. Instead we look through these relationships as deep partnerships and ways that we can help them facilitate improvements to their operations.”

Related Content

  • MaaS Markets conference leads delegates from concept to delivery
    December 5, 2016
    MaaS Market is ITS International’s first conference and will provide delegates with the information they need to move from concept to delivery.
  • UK fleet operators commit to taking diesel vans off roads
    September 6, 2018
    In the UK, 16 public and private sector fleet operators are to invest £40m in a bid to deploy 2,400 electric vans by 2020. The operators – which include Tesco - point to a recent study, in which the health damage caused by pollution from diesel vans has been put at £2.2bn per annum to the UK National Health Service and to society. The newly-formed consortium – called the Clean Van Commitment – is backed by the Department for Transport and led by charity Global Action Plan and energy and services group Engi
  • Insights into Mobility as a Service
    March 19, 2018
    Mobility as a Service (MaaS) is one of, if not the, biggest changes in the transport sector for many decades and ITS International’s stand is the place find out everything there is to know about MaaS - from concept to delivery. Having already run two successful MaaS Market conferences in London, the company is at Intertraffic highlighting its first US conference which is being run with the support of City of Atlanta and Georgia’s State Road & Tollway Authority. The US conference will take place in Atlanta
  • Kistler looks for speed camera synergies
    March 21, 2018
    Weigh-in-Motion (WIM) specialist Kistler says its move into speed camera enforcement will help complement its core activities. The firm acquired German company eso, which manufactures portable speed measurement devices, last year, and Tomas Pospisek, Kistler’s global market development manager for road & traffic, says: “We’re hoping this will bring us synergies. We’re monitoring the weight and they’re monitoring the speed. It’s an important step, for sure.” When it comes to WIM, Kistler still maintains ther