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

  • February 21, 2013
    IBM and NXP partner on Dutch connected car pilot
    The first results of a smarter traffic pilot, conducted in the Dutch city of Eindhoven by IBM and NXP Semiconductors demonstrate how the connected car automatically shares braking, acceleration and location data that can be analysed by the central traffic authority to identify and resolve road network issues, say the companies. “The trial successfully showed that anonymous information from vehicles can be analysed by local traffic authorities to resolve road network issues faster, reduce congestion and impr
  • August 10, 2020
    Lufft sensors help German smart city
    Using data can increase efficiency. Jerg Theurer of Mhascaro explains how one German town is becoming a smart city – with some help from Lufft sensors in a winter roads project
  • December 7, 2021
    Vaisala has launched Wx Road Insights
    Not everyone wants to - or can - manage a modern road network maintenance solution on their own. This is why Vaisala has created Wx Road Insights, a Data as a Service (DaaS) framework that minimises agencies’ infrastructure responsibilities while providing access to data they need to support decision-making.
  • November 18, 2015
    Innovation award for Lufft
    Measurement and control technology company Lufft has been names as a winner of the Dr Rudolf Eberle, named after the former Baden-Württemberg Minister of Economics and awarded by the Ministry of Economics. Since 1985, the Baden-Württemberg innovation award has celebrated medium-sized companies in the region who have developed outstanding technological innovations in the fields of industry, trade, and technological services. Lufft’s innovative Marwis mobile road sensor impressed the 12 members of the e