Skip to main content

Russian Days increase profile at Intertraffic

Russia plans to increase its profile significantly at this year’s Intertraffic with a series of three ‘Russian days’, bringing together representatives of the country’s central and regional governments, public and private companies, plus technical experts. The three sessions, starting at noon at the booth of the Ministry of Transport of the Russian Federation in the RAI’s Elicium Centre, will last for up to an hour. This will allow time for brief talks by specialist speakers, followed by questions from the
March 24, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Russia plans to increase its profile significantly at this year’s Intertraffic with a series of three ‘Russian days’, bringing together representatives of the country’s central and regional governments, public and private companies, plus technical experts.

The three sessions, starting at noon at the booth of the 7666 Ministry of Transport of the Russian Federation in the RAI’s Elicium Centre, will last for up to an hour. This will allow time for brief talks by specialist speakers, followed by questions from the audience.

The first session today will give details of several Russian road network development projects as examples of innovative road traffic management solutions. Among speakers will be the nation’s deputy transport minister Oleg Belozerov and the first deputy chief of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, VV Shvetsov.

Tomorrow’s session will look at Russia’s accomplishments and perspectives in key projects of the current decade, with speakers including the deputy head of the Federal Road Agency, AA Kostyuk and representatives of the city governments of Moscow and St Petersburg.

The final session, on Thursday, will put the spotlight on ERA-GLONASS, the Russian equivalent of the 1816 European Union’s e-Call system, which automatically sends an alert to the emergency services in the event of a road accident. This is estimated to cut the time of arrival at the accident scene by the emergency services by 30% and will save around 4,000 lives a year.

The sessions will also look at whether there is a Russian-specific nature to transport and ITS issues and whether international solutions to ITS problems are applicable to the country. The sessions will also look at perspectives for co-operation between Russia and other nations.
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 94455 0 oLinkExternal www.Mintrans.ru Ministry of Transport of the Russian Federation web false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=94455 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ETSI shows ITS standardisation developments at ITS World Congress
    September 26, 2012
    ETSI, the European Telecommunications Standards Institute, is exhibiting at the ITS World Congress to explain the work of its technical committee for ITS in developing standards for all aspects of ITS communication systems. Visitors to Stand P32 will be able to find out more about ETSI’s ITS Conformance Validation Framework, and meet its testing and ITS experts to discover the latest developments in ETSI ITS standardisation.
  • Versatile cameras from Lumenera
    October 29, 2014
    Lumenera offers a wide range of cameras specifi cally designed for use in advanced transportation systems. Compact, lightweight, versatile, with onboard memory buffering, a choice of data interface and ruggedised for harsh environments, Lumenera’s cameras are ideally suited for transportation applications such as tolling, red light and speed enforcement and automated parking. Lumenera has selected the most innovative sensor technology, paired with unique optimisation to deliver excellent imag
  • Swarco showcases Omnia platform
    September 7, 2014
    Swarco’s answer to the integrated road transport environment is its Omnia platform, an easy-to-use, map-based graphical user interface that helps cities to manage all their traffic and transportation carriers, independently of whether they use Swarco systems or existing legacy systems.
  • Edesix shows VideoBadge2 solution for enforcement staff
    March 26, 2014
    Edesix is showing a new version of its VideoBadge, which deters confrontations between the public and enforcement staff by filming incidents. The original VideoBadge, which is worn on the enforcement or police officer’s clothing, was introduced in 2011; by sliding down the front, the camera lens was exposed and started to record the scene, while a visible sign saying ‘recording in process’ was revealed. This frequently was enough to stop a verbal dispute developing into a physical one.