Skip to main content

The ice man cometh

Extreme meteorological events have captured global headlines in recent years. Adam Hill talks to Vaisala’s Mark DeVries about what that means for transportation companies trying to keep roads clear. Extreme meteorological events have captured global headlines in recent years. Adam Hill talks to Vaisala’s Mark DeVries about what that means for transportation companies trying to keep roads clear
August 7, 2018 Read time: 4 mins

Mark DeVries has been out in the cold for much of his working life. Not in the sense of being shunned – it’s just that he’s an expert on snow and ice removal so has spent more time than most in freezing temperatures, trying to find the best ways of keeping roads open and traffic moving.

When cold weather comes, local authorities tend to reach for the salt. But salt corrosion is a problem for highways and bridges as well as vehicles – and there are suggestions that it is affecting the state of freshwater ecosystems too - so using less of it makes sense. DeVries is a veteran of the industry, spending 30 years with McHenry County Division of Transportation. His other roles include chairman of the National APWA (American Public Works Association) winter maintenance sub-committee, and membership of both the Winter Maintenance Technical Service Program and the 856 Transportation Research Board’s winter maintenance committee.

DeVries is now lead consultant and winter maintenance expert for real-time weather data provider 144 Vaisala – but back in the 2000s in Illinois, he pioneered the use of beet juice as an alternative. “We were the first to use it with salt water: we built a system to combine the products together,” he recalls. “It’s become very popular in the US.”

Hitting headlines

It will not have escaped your attention, but there have been some fairly major weather events – including hurricanes and floods – hitting cities (and the headlines) in recent years. “We’ve seen more extreme events in the southern parts of the US,” DeVries muses. “We’ve had storms that have shut Atlanta down.”

For authorities tasked with keeping urban traffic moving, this presents a conundrum: finance is finite and equipment needs to earn its keep. “You have to gear yourself for what you consider ‘normal’,” DeVries says. Given that blizzards are so rare in the normally-temperate south of England, for example, it is a hard sell to secure much investment there in snow ploughs - but there was widespread disruption earlier this year in the UK as an unusually bitter cold front snarled up the transport system for significant periods. “When you have these situations, the time to talk about it is then,” he continues. “You can buy a fire truck and hope you never use it. Why don’t we think the same way about snow removal equipment? Because one week it’s bad and the next it’s warmer: people have short memories.”

Raised expectations

A variety of innovations are available to help - from sensors on snow ploughs which measure road conditions and report back, to weather stations installed along roadways providing real-time information to maintenance managers.

Road managers can also remotely apply chemicals using pre-installed systems to areas that are known to become dangerous. “We’ve got to be versatile as well,” says DeVries. Better data helps to drive better decisions and quicker responses, while better forecasting means preparedness is amplified.

“What’s really changed – and this is my own personal opinion – is that weather is in front of everyone, every day,” says DeVries. “Our dilemma is that once you’ve raised expectations, it’s hard to bring them back down – and it’s difficult sometimes to meet them. Cities are getting bigger, Chicago has expanded, we’re paving more, there are more cars, more people.”

People want to be able to move about, whatever the elements throw at them. “But should the main highway, the interstate, be in the same condition as the road you live on? Is that really achievable? Should it be?”

And for all the talk of cost/benefit, man does not control the environment. “There are going to be storms where Mother Nature wins,” DeVries concludes. Truly, that is the voice of experience.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • "They're not Democrat bridges and Republican roads - they're all bipartisan"
    April 17, 2025
    Concerns over the potential vulnerability of GPS could have significant implications for the tolling industry. IBTTA’s Kathryn Clay explains it all to Adam Hill, and looks to the future…
  • An even more focused Vaisala
    March 28, 2013
    An important strategic task every company must do periodically is review products and make sure they match the goals and direction of the company. In March, Vaisala, the global weather solutions provider, concluded that three non-weather road transportation products no longer match its long term strategy, and thus sold these products to another company. Vaisala says the change will allow it to increase its already industry-leading innovations, such as the non-intrusive road weather sensors, and the Conditio
  • A coalition of the willing: iATL
    April 5, 2024
    A living lab on the streets of Georgia, US, is helping to improve traffic safety by real-world deployments of technology. ITS International talks to the founder and some of the partners at the Infrastructure Automotive Technology Laboratory
  • Olympic challenges in Sochi
    May 27, 2014
    Sporting events always create problems for traffic planners and none more so than the Winter Olympics. It is difficult to think of more diametrically opposite challenges for transport planners than the 2012 Olympics in London and this year’s Winter Olympics in Sochi: from a summer event in the heart of a megacity with well established transport infrastructure to winter games with unpredictable weather and events in remote and mountainous locations. The Winter Games are always a challenge and Sochi was no di