Skip to main content

Dr Hiroyuki Watanabe looks ahead to 20th World Congress in Tokyo

The 20th ITS World Congress will be held in Tokyo from 14-18 October, 2013. Dr Hiroyuki Watanabe, Chairman, Japan Organising Committee reveals some of the highlights that delegates can look forward to.
October 24, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
Dr Hiroyuki Watanabe

The 20th ITS World Congress will be held in Tokyo from 14-18 October, 2013. Dr Hiroyuki Watanabe, Chairman, Japan Organising Committee reveals some of the highlights that delegates can look forward to.

Q It is one year to go before the ITS World Congress takes place in Tokyo. How are things shaping up.

A Next year’s Tokyo Congress marks the 20th anniversary of the ITS World Congress as a forum for building stronger international ties. During this time, international links have grown steadily and various new technologies have emerged. It will be three years since the congress was last held in Asia, and I am confi dent this event will provide participants with a compact outline of transportation, and ITS initiatives in this growing market, as well as plenty of opportunities for discussion.

Visiting Tokyo will provide a clear picture of cutting-edge ITS efforts in Japan and its capital, the latest global initiatives, and projects in growing markets, not to mention the chance to experience some of these at fi rst-hand, and we will push ahead with our preparations over the next year.

Q The theme chosen for the Congress is “Open ITS to the Next”. Can you encapsulate what that means.

A ITS is expanding into a new stage that will shape mobility for the next generation. In addition to offering solutions to conventional issues including traffi c accidents and congestion, ITS is reaching out to three new domains: energy management relating to electric vehicles and other new technologies; creation of new business opportunities in networked societies, and resilient transport systems that take lessons from the Great East Japan earthquake. Our congress theme incorporates the concept of expanding the potential of ITS so that everyone can take advantage of open platforms to participate and do business.

Q What will be some of the highlights of the event.

A Since the Congress is taking place in the Asian mega-city of Tokyo, it will focus on the following three points: Effi cient movement of people and goods in mega-cities; building resilient transport systems; and further efforts to improve transport safety and resolve congestion.

Particular emphasis will be placed on the two main aspects using probe data for disaster response and urban planning, and automated driving.
 
Adding probe data to information from transport infrastructure will enable a wider range of people to enjoy the benefi ts of ITS by extending coverage to city streets and regional roads as well as expressways and highways. Probe data can be used not only to improve safety, but also to alleviate congestion and revitalise urban areas
Moreover, it can assist with evacuation and emergency activities in the event of disaster. Such initiatives will be outlined at the Congress.

In terms of automated driving, in the aim of reducing traffi c accidents and congestion, millimeter-wave radar and vehicle-tovehicle communications are being used to prepare for practical implementation of driver support systems that make driving less tiring and more comfortable. In addition to reducing tragic accidents and chronic congestion on expressways and making driving more pleasant, such systems will help elderly people to stay active. The ultimate goal is to achieve fully automated driving.

I believe that the Tokyo congress will enable us to discuss the advent of a new participatory style of society where individual citizens can pursue better quality of life while contributing to society through their actions.

Q Any message for readers.

A We plan to use the central atrium in the exhibition hall for a special 20th anniversary display of panels and moving images on the past, present and future of ITS and links with Asia. As well as past congresses, this display will outline actual examples of automated driving technologies, vehicle infrastructure cooperative systems, disaster information systems, and more.

The Japan Organising Committee has started examining ways to tie in with two other big events taking place in Tokyo around the same time next year: CEATEC, Japan’s largest IT and electronics trade show; and the Tokyo Motor Show. We are trying to arrange for the atrium display footage and the showcase demonstrations to be used at the Tokyo Motor Show as well. We invite all interested parties to take part in this initiative. Whether you simply wish to provide video footage or want to bring technology and equipment to Japan to set up a showcase demonstration, we eagerly look forward to your participation.

%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.itsworldcongress.jp/index.html www.itsworldcongress.jp/index.html false http://www.itsworldcongress.jp/index.html%20 false false%>

Related Content

  • August 11, 2014
    Latest tolling, traffic enforcement systems from Vitronic
    Vitronic will use the ITS World Congress Detroit 2014 to showcase the next- generation of the company’s LIDAR-based traffic enforcement. The company says the new system builds on the best-in-class measurement technology of the revolutionary PoliScan product line and can be applied to a variety of enforcement scenarios, such as speed enforcement, red light enforcement, and tailgating. According to Vitronic, the new system has already proven its capabilities by outperforming competition in a recent tender in
  • March 31, 2015
    Limited places remaining for FIRM15 infrastructure meeting
    The FEHRL Infrastructure Research Meeting 2015 (FIRM15) will be held on 22 and 23 April 2015 at the Diamant Centre in Brussels, Belgium. Held every two years, for the first time FIRM15 is opening up to all transport modes with speakers and participants from the rail sector. With the theme of ‘Innovative maintenance of Transport Infrastructure: Faster, cheaper, more reliable, safer and greener’, FIRM15 aims at mapping the problems and challenges of innovative maintenance of transport infrastructure;
  • September 10, 2014
    ITS Australia launches Asia Pacific Student Scholarship program
    The 2014 World Congress in Detroit provided the ideal venue to launch the ITS Australia Asia Pacific Student Excellence Scholarship program. The program offers sponsorships to up to 10 students representing ITS Asia Pacific associations to attend the 23rd ITS World Congress 2016 in Melbourne, Australia. ITS Australia CEO, Susan Harris, says: “ITS Australia created this Scholarship Program to support and encourage student participation, not just attendance, at the Congress, and to recognise student exc
  • January 3, 2017
    ITS World Congress 2017 call for demos
    As part of the Montréal World Congress 2017, conference organizers are planning to feature live demonstrations of ITS technologies. The city of Montréal will create a virtual test bed on the streets adjacent to the Convention Centre. This test bed will include an arterial loop circling the Centre and a section of a nearby limited access highway that will be equipped with DSRC roadside units integrated with local signal controllers to support demonstrations of connected vehicle technologies. In order to a