Skip to main content

New Zealand to trial mobile road weather data acquisition

From September 2016, MetService and the New Zealand Transport Agency will commence a road weather mobile data acquisition trial, in conjunction with road contractors Fulton Hogan and Downer. The aim of the trial is to provide MetService, the Transport Agency, road contractors and the travelling public with pre-warning of challenging and dangerous driving conditions or potential road closures during severe weather. The six-month trial follows a pilot sensor-assessment process and aims to expand road
August 16, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
From September 2016, MetService and the 6296 New Zealand Transport Agency will commence a road weather mobile data acquisition trial, in conjunction with road contractors Fulton Hogan and Downer.
 
The aim of the trial is to provide MetService, the Transport Agency, road contractors and the travelling public with pre-warning of challenging and dangerous driving conditions or potential road closures during severe weather.

The six-month trial follows a pilot sensor-assessment process and aims to expand road weather observation assets by evaluating the use of a range of vehicle-mounted sensors for monitoring road weather conditions across the network.

As the vehicles travel the road network, they transmit real-time data continuously to provide observations of road and air temperature, rain, snow, slush, water film height, ice content, humidity and dew point temperature. Some of the sensors are capable of taking measurements up to 100 times per second. Data can be viewed on smartphones connected to the sensors by Bluetooth and transmitted on cellular networks for subsequent analysis.
 
The data collected will deliver key insights for improving road weather forecasting and road safety in locations for which there is currently no weather information available.
 
MetService says this technology will help enhance road weather modelling systems and provide access to a wide range of previously unavailable data to assist with planning and operational activities.
 
Drivers of the sensor vehicles have immediate access to data to inform them of dangerous driving conditions, and fleet operators will have better quality, more timely information for fleet management.
 
Data from mobile sensors will complement information from MetService’s existing road weather station network, which covers over 40 state highway trouble spots.

Related Content

  • June 19, 2017
    New Zealand council deploys road-weather data service on alpine road
    Queenstown Lakes District Council (QLDC), New Zealand, is set to receive accurate road-weather data for the alpine Crown Range road this winter following the signing of a five-year decision-support contract with MetService.
  • May 9, 2017
    MetService to supply road weather information to New Zealand road alliance
    The Milford Road Alliance, a partnership between the New Zealand Transport Agency and Downer NZ to ensure the safe and efficient management of activities on State Highway 94, is to implement new and enhanced weather forecast services from MetService. Climbing through the Southern Alps, State Highway 94 is one of the highest highways in New Zealand. It includes the Milford Road which stretches from Te Anau through Fiordland National Park to Milford Sound and the high-altitude alpine conditions, a steep and r
  • March 21, 2017
    NZ Transport Agency signs road-weather contract with MetService
    From 1 May 2017, NZ Transport Agency commences a new five-year road-weather data and data visualisation service with the Meteorological Service of New Zealand (MetService). MetService is contracting Finnish road-weather forecasting company, Foreca to provide high-resolution road-weather forecasts which are based on MetService’s own forecasting services and a range of additional weather and road information. The services will provide MetService road-weather forecasters with considerably enhanced, yea
  • April 8, 2014
    Lufft’s new sensor collects road weather information at traffic speed
    Mobile road weather information sensor Marwis, developed by German measurement and control technology company Lufft, can be mounted on any vehicle to collect real-time weather data such as road surface temperature, dew point, water film height, road conditions (humidity, snow, ice and frost) and grip (friction) as well as other environmental data. Marwis measures meteorological data and road condition information 100 times per second. At a driving speed of 80km/h, the mobile sensor records every 20cm, r