Skip to main content

Jakarta kicks off second ERP trial

The Jakarta administration is set to kick off a second trial run of the electronic road pricing scheme aimed at helping ease traffic congestion, with the aim of having the system up and running by January 2016. Norway-based Q-Free has set up a gantry with cameras and sensors for the trial run in South Jakarta. The system works by detecting cars passing beneath it, and then remotely deducting a toll from a stored-value card in an on-board unit (OBU) inside the vehicle. OBUs have been installed in 100 car
October 2, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
The Jakarta administration is set to kick off a second trial run of the electronic road pricing scheme aimed at helping ease traffic congestion, with the aim of having the system up and running by January 2016.

Norway-based 108 Q-Free has set up a gantry with cameras and sensors for the trial run in South Jakarta.  The system works by detecting cars passing beneath it, and then remotely deducting a toll from a stored-value card in an on-board unit (OBU) inside the vehicle. OBUs have been installed in 100 cars for the trial.

A previous trial, also held in South Jakarta, was carried out in July by Vienna company 81 Kapsch and deemed a success by Deputy Governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama. However, according to Muhammad Akbar, the Jakarta transportation office chief, a recurring problem during that trial was the inability of the cameras on the gantry to correctly identify the licence plates of all vehicles, which Akbar said was due to the non-standard typeface used on Indonesian licence plates.

“There’s so much variation in the typeface, and most of them aren’t the standard ones issued by the police,” he said. “A lot of them are made by vendors by the side of the road. That’s why we need an ERP system that can read even a modified plate.”

The city administration plans to put the project out to tender at the end of this year, with both Kapsch and Q-Free expected to tender for the contract.

Akbar said that if the contract was finalised by February 2015, work could begin on building gantries in the streets covered by the scheme, with the ERP program being implemented in January 2016.

An agency is to be set up to manage the program, including handling the tolls collected and coordinating the traffic enforcement related to ERP violations.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The benefit of Lidar: touch, don’t look
    September 28, 2020
    The benefits of Lidar as a safety device for automobiles rather than as an enabler for AVs are easy to overlook – but Dr Jun Pei of Cepton Technologies tells Adam Hill why that would be a big mistake
  • Redflex: ‘Consistency of enforcement will drive compliance’
    August 7, 2020
    Mark Talbot, CEO of Redflex Holdings, puts himself in the ITS International hotseat to answer questions about leveraging technology, MaaS changes and new areas of business
  • Need for harmonisation in ITS standards
    February 1, 2012
    As the calendar rolls over, and we hop from continent to continent and World Congress to World Congress, where Memoranda of Understanding and cooperation agreements are the headline news, it is easy for those not intimately involved to forget that standards definition is a well-nigh continual process. Significant progress has been made in recent months towards achieving the critical mass and economies of scale which are going to drive development and deployment in, amongst other things, cooperative infrastr
  • Indonesia to introduce ERP system to ease congestion
    October 22, 2013
    The administration of Jakarta City, Indonesia will introduce an electronic road pricing (ERP) system as part of efforts to reduce traffic congestion by discouraging private vehicle use. Under the plan, several areas of the city will be designated as ERP areas and a toll payment is to be imposed on vehicles passing through the areas. The ERP system to be implemented by January-March 2014 will require vehicles to have special hologram stickers.