Skip to main content

EU to support European ITS and cross-border traveller information services

The EU's TEN-T Programme will provide over US$58 million of co-financing for the deployment and use of intelligent transport systems (ITS) on European highways to improve their safety, security and efficiency. The projects will address several ITS services, including intelligent truck parking, travel time and real-time traffic information. Close cooperation among 20 EU Member States, road authorities and private stakeholders will improve and support ITS on the main European road network. It will provide
January 21, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
The EU's TEN-T Programme will provide over US$58 million of co-financing for the deployment and use of intelligent transport systems (ITS) on European highways to improve their safety, security and efficiency. The projects will address several ITS services, including intelligent truck parking, travel time and real-time traffic information.

Close cooperation among 20 EU Member States, road authorities and private stakeholders will improve and support ITS on the main European road network. It will provide safety and traffic related information to all users and ensure the interoperability of ITS services across the EU.

ITS will be deployed in five separate projects, each of them focussing on a specific part of Europe:

The URSA MAJOR project will cover roads linking the North Sea ports, the Ruhr and Rhine area, as well as metropolitan areas in southern Germany and northern Italy. Austria and Switzerland are also involved in the project as transit countries.

The CROCODILE project includes three main road corridors:  Baltic-Adriatic (linking Germany to Italy and Slovenia), Rhine-Danube (Germany to Bulgaria) and Orient-East-Med (Germany to Greece).

The NEXT-ITS project will deal with the Scandinavian-Mediterranean Corridor from Oslo and the Finnish-Russian border in the north via Copenhagen, to Bremen and Hannover in Germany.

The MedTIS project will deploy ITS services in Italy, France, Spain and Portugal along the Mediterranean corridor, linking several major sea ports and connecting the Mediterranean with the Atlantic coast.

The Arc Atlantique project will link key economic nodes in the UK (Belfast, Glasgow, Cardiff, London), Ireland (Dublin), France (Calais, Lille, Paris, Lyon, Bordeaux, Toulouse), the Netherlands (Rotterdam, Amsterdam), Belgium (Antwerp, Brussels, Charleroi, Liège), Spain (San Sebastian, Bilbao, Valladolid, Santander, A Coruña) and Portugal (Porto, Lisbon).

Examples of ITS services deployed by the above projects are: Intelligent truck parking services, based on common European standards to find available, safe and secure parking places for trucks; Road navigation services with reliable information on travel conditions, to plan the most cost-efficient journeys and receive accurate travel time estimations

The projects will also improve traffic management and the cross-border exchange of information among the EU Member States, reducing delays due to traffic congestion and increasing the safety level in the European roads.

The projects were selected for EU funding with the assistance of external experts under the TEN-T Multi-Annual Call 2013, priority 'Intelligent Transport Systems'. Their implementation will be monitored by INEA, the European Commission's Innovation and Networks Executive Agency. All projects are to be completed by December 2015.

Related Content

  • March 9, 2018
    C-roads will soon be ‘a reality’
    Cross-border C-ITS-enabled roads (C-roads) will start becoming a reality in 2019, with safety as the driver, according to AustriaTech/ITS Austria's Martin Bohm. He made the comment during a recent Brussels workshop run by the European ITS and C-roads platforms to assess results of road corridor pilots. The latter is a joint initiative by EU member states and road operators to test and implement C-ITS services for universal harmonisation and interoperability. We can, he continued, deploy systems
  • December 3, 2012
    Study reveals in-car devices aid positive changes to driver behaviour
    The results of a four-year study by the Field Operational Tests of Aftermarket and Nomadic devices in Vehicles (TeleFOT) Consortium were presented at a recent conference in Brussels. The study focused on the assessment of the impact of driver support functions provided by in-vehicle aftermarket and nomadic devices on driving and driver behaviour. Coordinated by the Technical Research Centre of Finland (VTT) and with a budget of US$19.5 million, the four-year TeleFOT project is one of the biggest traffic IC
  • December 13, 2024
    PTV boosts its partnership with Hamburg
    Germany’s second-largest city wants to improve public transport and 'livability'
  • April 19, 2012
    Google live traffic announced for 13 European countries
    Google has announced that it is making road traffic conditions available in 13 countries in Europe. The new traffic information is in the traffic layer on Google Maps, Google Maps for mobile, and Google Maps Navigation (Beta). Coverage includes all freeways and highways, as well as large roads in major cities in Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Ireland, Israel, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Poland, Slovakia, Spain and Switzerland. Users in the UK will also benefit from a finer grain of street