Skip to main content

Westminster: DoT’s Ella Taylor on transport changes and challenges

Ella Taylor, head of innovation, connectivity and data, centre for connected and autonomous vehicles, Department for Transport (DoT) addressed the changes in the transport ecosystem, and how the government hopes to address challenges at Westminster Energy, Environment & Transport Forum Keynote Seminar. Opening the presentation, Taylor stated that changes in automation are not only affecting cars but are also creating new modes of transport. In addition, changes in business models are also enabling
January 15, 2018 Read time: 3 mins

Ella Taylor, head of innovation, connectivity and data, centre for connected and autonomous vehicles, 1837 Department for Transport (DoT) addressed the changes in the transport ecosystem, and how the government hopes to address challenges at Westminster Energy, Environment & Transport Forum Keynote Seminar.

Opening the presentation, Taylor stated that changes in automation are not only affecting cars but are also creating new modes of transport. In addition, changes in business models are also enabling buses to pick passengers up along the way and to no longer be restricted to fixed routes.

Additionally, she highlighted that the transition to autonomous vehicles could also bring safety improvements and reduce 80% of accidents caused by human error, while electric vehicles have the potential to improve noise levels and help to enhance the quality of air.

Taylor added, however, that these changes may not be perfect for everybody and that you could end up increasing congestion on roads and that the air quality benefits will not be realised if the vehicles are not electric.

“We need to make sure that the technology is being developed with everyone in mind so that we don’t have to go back and go ahead with an expensive retrofitting solution and that then it does not become an excuse to not deliver the technology to the public.”

Secondly, Taylor Added that there is also a challenge on when the changes are going to occur and how people will respond to them.

The presentation explored what is currently being done and highlighted the four grand challenges outlined in the Industrial Strategy in which the UK has the potential to be world leaders. These included clean roads, the future of mobility, the ageing population and AI & data.

“Through stating that we are one of these grand challenges it is giving a strong message to industry that we really are passionate and that we will support them and we will work with them”, Taylor said.

The DoT will publish the future of urban mobility strategy, which recognises the changes in technology with plans to work collaboratively to develop them in line with its vision for transport. It also intends to publish A Road to Zero Strategy later this year.

A regulatory review is also being conducted with the intention of making regulations to encourage innovation, collaboration. Additionally, a consultation is currently looking at what drivers need to do to make sure they can use their car while using remote control parking assistance.

The final plan is to continue the work for the office of low emission vehicles to develop a self-sustaining ecosystem with two pots of money. The first is the intelligent mobility fund, which supplies products such as the driverless pods in Greenwich; while the second one is being used on test beds held in both public and enclosed environments.

“The way that we think that we can be successful is through collaboration and through offering a massive amount of talent across the industries required to make this a success. It’s about having insurance industries, security industries, banking industries all together being the selling point for the UK.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Open-source journey planning - the way forward?
    January 23, 2012
    Peter Bell, managing director of journey planning provider Trapeze Group, ponders the business models which will underpin future travel information services from a UK perspective Traditionally, journey planning websites for public transport in the UK (for example, Transport Direct, the Traveline regions or National Rail Enquiries) have been provided by the transport operators keen to increase ridership and revenues, or by public bodies who hope to encourage a modal switch to public transport by making it e
  • Drones make Soarizon watcher of the skies
    December 16, 2020
    Getting a close view of where traffic problems are occurring is one of the main selling points of the ITS vision industry. Soarizon is doing things differently, Benjamin Orcan tells Adam Hill
  • Progress towards a pan-European cooperative infrastructure
    July 17, 2012
    Kallistratos Dionelis, General Secretary of ASECAP, makes the case for a lightly regulated, staged progression towards a pan-European cooperative infrastructure environment, the achievement of which should look to engender cooperation between the public and private sectors. Such an approach, he says, is the only real path to success.
  • Sampo Hietanen: “Why BP investment in MaaS Global is a good thing”
    November 26, 2019
    As a multinational oil giant, BP might not seem like the greenest choice for sustainable mobility provider and Whim owner MaaS Global. Sampo Hietanen explains his reasoning...