Skip to main content

Cold, hard truths

By comparison with the snow paralysis which hit North America at the beginning of February, and the conditions endured by much of Northern Europe this last winter, it took only the lightest dusting of snow to bring the UK transport system slipping, sliding and then juddering to a halt in January.
February 27, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
Jason Barnes, Editor of ITS International
By comparison with the snow paralysis which hit North America at the beginning of February, and the conditions endured by much of Northern Europe this last winter, it took only the lightest dusting of snow to bring the UK transport system slipping, sliding and then juddering to a halt in January. That perhaps understates the difficulties and dangers faced by some but the situation led to national debate over adequate allocation of resources and the ability to cope. I'll stay with the UK, because the points I want to make are universal. Several commentators in the national media observed (quite rightly, I think) that undue emphasis was being placed on an (in)ability to cope over a very small period; that providing adequate resources to deal with conditions over just a couple of the 52weeks on the calendar would very quickly swallow up funding that just doesn't exist. The cold snap served to demonstrate just how infrequently we in the UK have to cope with 'real' weather. It also demonstrated a very narrow definition of coping.

 Many developed countries have existed in the post-industrial phase for quite some time. Fewer and fewer people work in factories actually making things. Where such places still exist, much is done by machines controlled by a fraction of the staff we once saw. Old-style manufacturing has long since departed for low-wage economies but many of those economies exist on a knife-edge; it will take only a slight rise in incomes to remove their advantage over automation. Then they too will face what other countries have already . But put such crystal ball-gazing aside. For two weeks, the UK stood still. And for two weeks my personal productivity was unaffected. It probably rose, in fact. I worked from home, gloried in not having to get up quite so early, took photographs of the garden covered in snow and, on rare forays to the local supermarket, watched the world become a friendlier place. Robbed of the ability to hurry, people stop to converse or help those who needed it. Writing this now, I rather miss it. And yet still we railed against the inability to 'cope'. We still cling to this need to travel to and from places of work. The blunt truth is that many of us don't need to be in the same room as others to do what we do. We already have the technologies in place that we need to remove many unnecessary car journeys and, potentially, the need for additional road capacity in some situations. We use technology to pump high-bandwidth entertainment into our homes yet fail to see how we can use this to improve quality of life in the broader sense. Perhaps we can be forgiven; as individuals, many of us are subject to the vagaries of employers who've yet to see the possibilities - or be encouraged to. Technology has reached a point where transport cannot be viewed in exclusivity. It can bring many back into employment who are currently excluded - new mothers, for instance, or the otherwise housebound or tied. The transport networks could be freed up for those who really need them. Transport has to be viewed, now more than ever, more intimately with policies on employment, on taxation, on where and how we live. Because quality of life means far more than a smooth commute, and quite often the greenest way to travel is via email.

That's the crux of it. The debate over whether manufacturing my new telephone or running shoes in China or India is sustainable or even wise in the geopolitical sense doesn't belong here. Transport, like politics, is local. 'Local' in the sense that it pertains to a limited geographic area, and 'local' in the sense of being immediate to the individual making a journey. We have to stop applying technology as a palliative if sustainability is the real goal. I'm all for the wider application of such things as road pricing, if only to counter the unthinking journey decisions which many of us still make. But until we accept the real truth, that many of the journeys people make are truly unnecessary, and that we need to both show people why and offer credible alternatives, we will continue to struggle to gain acceptance of real change.

Related Content

  • Israel aspires to ITS-led future
    May 29, 2013
    Shay Soffer, Chief Scientist with the Israel National Road Safety Authority, talks to Jason Barnes about his country’s current ITS outlook and how he sees this developing in the future. Israel ranks alongside countries such as the US and France in the road safety stakes, with an average 7.1 deaths per billion kilometres driven. But at that point the similarities end, as the country’s overriding issue is pedestrian safety. This is driven by several factors, including being a relatively small country where pe
  • Turnkey projects deliver enforcement for developing countries
    January 25, 2012
    Jenoptik Robot’s Ralf Schmitz talks about enforcement deployments in developing countries, and how those with long-established histories still have much to learn. In the enforcement sector, the concept of technology provider also being responsible for operations is hardly a new one. Nevertheless, it has gained significant traction over the last five or six years and has the potential to radically change the complexion of the industry according to Jenoptik Robot’s Director, Sales Ralf Schmitz.
  • Idris paves the way for loop based speed enforcement
    February 1, 2012
    With the Idris system now validated as a speed verification tool, the way is open for loops to be used in more complex enforcement applications. Diamond Consulting Services (DCS), developer of the Idris inductive loop-based vehicle detection and classification system, has recently successfully conducted validation trials which, the company says, open the way for Idris to be used for speed verification and loop-based sensors to be used for more complex applications such as speed-on-green and differential spe
  • US incident management needs national standardisation
    January 26, 2012
    I-95 Corridor Coalition's Tom Martin discusses the state of the art in incident management and what visitors to this year's ITS World Congress can expect of the first ever Emergency Responder-Incident Management Day. Developments in incident management are driven in the main by need. A bald statement, and one which holds no surprises, it nevertheless quantifies the evolutionary process within the I-95 Corridor Coalition over the last decade and more. Spread over 16 states from Maine to Florida, the Coalitio