Skip to main content

Yeti more AV snow-clearing by Semcon

There is a lot of debate about the place of autonomous vehicles on our roads – but a Swedish company is already ploughing ahead with driverless snow clearance on airport runways, writes David Arminas Femcon, a Swedish applied automation company, has started an on-site project to clear snow from runway landing lights using autonomous vehicles (AVs). Most often, this time-consuming job has to be done manually because of the intricate manoeuvres needed to avoid damaging the lighting systems. The trial pro
April 29, 2019 Read time: 4 mins
Autonomous tandem snow-clearing of a runway
There is a lot of debate about the place of autonomous vehicles on our roads – but a Swedish company is already ploughing ahead with driverless snow clearance on airport runways, writes David Arminas


Femcon, a Swedish applied automation company, has started an on-site project to clear snow from runway landing lights using autonomous vehicles (AVs).

Most often, this time-consuming job has to be done manually because of the intricate manoeuvres needed to avoid damaging the lighting systems.

The trial project, which started in January, is at Örnsköldsvik Airport, around 525km north of the Swedish capital Stockholm.

Semcon has already designed a snowplough control system – Yeti Snow Technology. The system sets up digital patterns for autonomous snow clearance for runways at airports. It downloads these patterns and monitors a number of vehicles that navigate using RTK GPS, an accurate form of position measurement, and communicate using 4G modems.

Recent upgrade


Örnsköldsvik is a regional airport built in 1961. It was recently upgraded to take larger aircraft catering for longer European flights and handles just under 80,000 passengers annually. In late 2014, the airport received permission to have the first remote-controlled control tower in the world, which is controlled from Sundsvall-Timrå Airport.

“Smart automation of airports will make it possible to keep more of the smaller, less busy airports open and retain staff thanks to reduced costs and increased safety,” said Anne Piegsa, technical project manager at Semcon.

The latest project to clear snow around landing lights is being implemented by Semcon in partnership with Lundberg Hymas, a Swedish manufacturer of the maintenance and utility tool carrier-tractor by the same name and similar to a small wheeled loader.

The Lundberg will be made autonomous for the landing light project. It will be possible to steer these vehicles remotely from a traffic management centre developed by Yeti Snow Technology. Extreme vehicle precision is required, and the vehicle has to be able to operate in all weathers – these factors present a challenge. Importantly, it will also be possible to interrupt the clearing of snow to allow an aircraft to land, according to Semcon.

Increasing efficiency


Yeti, co-owned by Semcon and Øveraasen Snow Removal Systems, is developing autonomous snowploughs for Norwegian airport operator 4852 Avinor. Øveraasen, a Norwegian family business, has been developing and manufacturing snow ploughs, snow blowers and runway sweepers for more than 80 years. In 2013, Øveraasen delivered what it says is the world’s largest snow blower to Oslo Airport Gardermoen – ‘a mega blower’ with more than 1,640kw of power.

The aim of the Yeti project is to increase efficiency and reduce delays at airports. Semcon is developing its technology for the Swedish Civil Aviation Administration – LFV - as part of its Autonomous Vehicles for Airports projects. Husqvarna, RISE, FlyPulse, Swedavia and Combitech are also working on various sub-projects as part of the initiative.

Last March, Semcon said that, for the first time, AVs 20m long and 5.5m wide, cleared snow from a runway at Fagernes Airport in Leirin, Norway, 200km north of Oslo. The snowploughs had enough capacity to clear an area of 357,500m² an hour. They can clear snow in formation, several vehicles working together, and with the same precision no matter the weather, explained John Emil Halden, Semcon project manager, at the time.

Last September, Semcon announced that it is using the same system as that in Fagernes at Oslo Airport. “Our aim is to complete 40 operations to ensure that the system is working as intended and see how we can develop it further. We are then hoping that more world airports will be interested in this technology,” concluded Halden.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Volkswagen tests Level 4 AVs in Hamburg
    April 17, 2019
    Volkswagen Research is testing autonomous vehicles (AVs) at SAE Level 4 in real driving conditions in the German city of Hamburg. The announcement comes as the fall-out from VW’s ‘Dieselgate’ nightmare – when the company was found to have programmed turbocharged direct injection diesel engines to activate their emissions controls for laboratory tests - putters on. This week the company’s former chief executive Martin Winterkorn was charged with fraud for his involvement. But VW has admitted that the scan
  • C-ITS in the EU: ‘It has got a little tribal recently’
    April 16, 2019
    As the C-ITS Delegated Act begins its journey through the European policy maze, Adam Hill looks at who is expecting what from this proposed framework for connected vehicles – and why some people are insisting that the lawmakers are already getting things wrong
  • Cadillac future is V2X, says General Motors
    June 7, 2018
    One of the biggest automotive manufacturers on the planet has signalled its intention to embrace cutting-edge ITS technology across an iconic brand. General Motors is to introduce vehicle-to-everything (V2X) communications – while extending a semi-autonomous, hands-free driver assistance feature - in its Cadillac range. The company made the announcement in a keynote speech at ITS America’s annual meeting in Detroit. Mark Reuss, GM executive vice president (above), global product development, purchasing an
  • Vaisala's RoadAI can optimise maintenance
    August 20, 2019
    Alerts for natural disasters are ones that most of us would rather do without, writes Adam Hill. But the ITS industry still needs help to deal with more common meteorological issues Google Maps has added SOS alerts to its service. For those of us more used to using the phone app to navigate from a metro station to an unfamiliar restaurant, this may seem extreme. But this is not what Google has in mind. Its SOS messages are for “hurricane forecast cones, earthquake shake-maps and flood forecasts”. That