Skip to main content

Future of transport to be revealed at UK summit on intelligent mobility

The UK Government-backed Transport Systems Catapult has announced it will host a unique national summit on intelligent mobility and the future of transport next month. Featuring some of the most prominent thinkers in transport technology, research, and policy, the Imagine Festival will reveal how different sectors believe technology will transform global transport. According to David Reid, director of the Imagine Festival at the Catapult, the Imagine Festival has been created so leading minds from UK i
May 11, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
%$Linker: 2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 9782 0 oLinkInternal <span class="oLinkInternal"><span class="oLinkInternal">RSS</span></span> Events (Diary) false /rss/events/ true false%>The UK Government-backed 7800 Transport Systems Catapult has announced it will host a unique national summit on intelligent mobility and the future of transport next month. Featuring some of the most prominent thinkers in transport technology, research, and policy, the Imagine Festival will reveal how different sectors believe technology will transform global transport.
 
According to David Reid, director of the Imagine Festival at the Catapult, the Imagine Festival has been created so leading minds from UK industry, academia and government can reveal how they believe the way we move people and goods across the world will change over the next 5-10 years.

The event will be held on the 11 and 12 June at Transport Systems Catapult’s Imovation Centre in Milton Keynes and will examine how a diverse range of technologies, from visualisation to robotics, can help address a huge variety of problems, spanning congestion, pollution and wider societal trends such as the growing and ageing global population, the rapid depletion of traditional energy resources and increasing urbanisation.
 
Speakers at the Festival include: Simon Smith, Director of Passenger Service Design, 1837 Department for Transport; Rod O’Shea, UK General Manager, 4243 Intel Corporation; Stephen Pattison, Vice President, ARM; Richard Harris, Director of International Transportation, 4186 Xerox; Dr Mark Darbyshire, Chief Technologist, 7352 SAP.

Event sessions will look at: driving change, how autonomous vehicles and robotics are transforming the future of roads, personal transport, and freight and the impact it will have on the future of mobility; rail revolution, from real-time information to sentiment mapping and how the rail industry is responding to customer demands; big data and transport - from smart cards to real-time passenger information, how can data be used to improve how we travel?

“From driverless vehicles and smarter trains, to harnessing the power of big data to create more seamless journeys, this event represents a unique opportunity to encourage the joined-up thinking required to position the UK at the forefront of the emerging Intelligent Mobility market. It’s an industry estimated to be worth US$1.3 trillion by 2025, creating jobs and a securing long-term economic growth in the UK,” says Reid.
 
“As champions of Intelligent Mobility, the Catapult and its partners are taking responsibility for changing the way we all look at transport as a seamless system spanning road, rail, air and sea,” continued Reid. “To do this our thinking has to cut across and go beyond the traditional boundaries of this industry. This is why we created Imagine Festival. It’s a way to explore new ideas from a huge spread of sectors. That includes anyone with an interest in technology and innovation that could have an impact including SMEs, entrepreneurs, innovators, technologists, business leaders, academics and policymakers.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Streetline showcases smart parking at ITS World Congress
    October 11, 2012
    Streetline will showcase smart parking technology that combines sensors and a suite of applications to provide cities with real time and historical data and offer flexible parking options for residents and visitors while reducing traffic congestion in downtown areas. As the company points out, cities are facing the challenge of aging infrastructure, a growing population and limited financial resources.
  • Majority of Brits do not think AVs will reduce accidents, says Axa
    December 3, 2018
    Three-quarters of UK residents do not believe driverless cars will improve road safety, even though 90% of accidents are caused by human error. In a survey of 2,000 respondents, insurance firm Axa says only a third of UK residents believe driverless cars would be better for the environment and only 25% think the technology will improve safety for pedestrians. Axa emphasises that motorists are confused by the definition of a driverless car as well as by what sort of autonomous technology is available in mo
  • Austrian Ministry of Transport to bring Gerd Leonhard to TRA 2018
    January 25, 2018
    The Austrian Ministry of Transport will bring author and futurist Gerd Leonhard to the Transport Research Arena (TRA) 2018 in Vienna where he will speak about the importance of new technologies and the role of humans in the digital world of mobility. This year’s overall theme is on digitalisation in mobility and will focus on the compatibility between technology and user-friendly mobility.
  • PTV Group launches global traffic survey
    February 26, 2014
    Transport planning software company PTV Group has launched an online survey, 'The Strategy – How Cities Manage Traffic' (link http://vision-traffic.ptvgroup.com/index.php?id=8553), in an effort to discover the strategies used by the world’s cities and local authorities in planning their transport strategy. The survey covers actual requirements and the measures taken to achieve set goals on optimising driving speeds, increasing road capacity and moderating the effects of congestion; changes to mobility pl