Skip to main content

Smarter transportation infrastructure means smarter choices says IBM

Last month’s Economic Development Vitality Initiative forum, co-sponsored by IBM, identified strong infrastructure, including intelligent transportation systems (ITS) as highlighted by panellist Scott Belcher, CEO of ITS America, as essential. The key to ensuring the sustainability and resilience of our critical transportation infrastructure, in the end, comes down to encouraging the right choices. Data collected by industry, government and academia over the past several decades shows a clear correlation
November 26, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Last month’s Economic Development Vitality Initiative forum, co-sponsored by 62 IBM, identified strong infrastructure, including intelligent transportation systems (ITS) as highlighted by panellist Scott Belcher, CEO of 560 ITS America, as essential.

The key to ensuring the sustainability and resilience of our critical transportation infrastructure, in the end, comes down to encouraging the right choices. Data collected by industry, government and academia over the past several decades shows a clear correlation between a modal shift from personal vehicle to public transit use and positive environmental benefits in two very distinct ways.

Reducing emission sources is dramatic in terms of CO2 reductions. Because traffic is reduced due to the move to public transit, the flow of the remaining vehicles on the highway becomes more efficient and reduced congestion lowers the carbon footprint of these vehicles. The reduced energy use made available on the demand side by such efficiency has additional environmental benefits on the supply side by lowering the environmental impact of energy production and distribution.

Transit is a win-win situation when it comes to both the environment and the public. Even though there is growing public interest in using mass transit, it is important to provide practical incentives through clear and accurate real-time information that allows commuters to make the shift to mass transit from their own vehicles as seamless and easy as possible.   Weather, maintenance work, incidents and events each play a role in how different modes of transportation operate so access to transit information helps citizens make more informed immediate and long-term choices. The end result will be a balanced optimization of transit use and personal vehicles, which can result in a faster commute and many environmental benefits. Moreover, it ensures that no infrastructure capacity is sub-optimized, that we need build, enhance or maintain only that which we actually use.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Public transport key to climate change, says report
    September 19, 2014
    A new report, released in advance of United Nations Secretary-General’s Climate Summit on 23 September, claims that more than US$100 trillion in cumulative public and private spending could be saved and 1,700 megatons of annual carbon dioxide (CO2) - a 40 percent reduction of urban passenger transport emissions - could be eliminated by 2050 if the world expands public transportation, walking and cycling in cities. The report, A Global High Shift Scenario, from the Institute for Transportation Development
  • Promoting cycling is the solution to congestion and pollution
    August 20, 2015
    Cycling offers health, air quality and road space/parking benefits, promoting governments and the EU to look at tax and technology initiatives. David Crawford reports. One way to improve urban air quality is to make green alternatives to car use financially attractive. Incentivising employees to switch their travel-to-work mode to using their own bikes could increase cycling’s modal share of commuting travel by 50%, a recent French research project suggests. The country’s government already subsidises pu
  • Traffic tech firms: save the planet!
    May 20, 2022
    Kapsch, Yunex and Swarco pen passionate open letter to World Economic Forum delegates
  • Underinvestment in infrastructure threatens economic growth
    January 24, 2012
    The 2011 Urban Mobility Report from the Texas Transportation Institute highlights the dangers of continued underinvestment in transportation infrastructure but also offers some hope in terms of possible solutions