Skip to main content

Transformation of UK transport ‘has hardly begun’

As the Highways UK event approaches on 25-26 November, Jennie Martin, secretary general of ITS United Kingdom, believes the technological transformation of transport in the UK has hardly begun. She says, “The changes that are coming are going to affect everyone. We are going to be answering questions most people haven’t even thought to ask. In ITS, the UK is ahead of the game, but the game is changing. It’s an incredibly exciting time.’”
November 13, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
As the 8268 Highways UK event approaches on 25-26 November, Jennie Martin, secretary general of ITS United Kingdom, believes the technological transformation of transport in the UK has hardly begun.

She says, “The changes that are coming are going to affect everyone. We are going to be answering questions most people haven’t even thought to ask. In ITS, the UK is ahead of the game, but the game is changing. It’s an incredibly exciting time.’”

Martin is keen to discuss the need for a radically new approach to transport policy:

“It’s not just about A to B. There is a whole alphabet of human need after that and research is showing that transport is related to all of it. There is a human need to travel for at least one part of every day, for example, regardless of purpose. It is good in itself, like listening to music.”

Can transport policy be responsive to these deeper, less functional human needs? Jennie Martin answers with an emphatic yes. It not only can, but it must if we are to build healthier cities and towns, she says.

“Big data is giving us information we couldn’t have dreamt of 20 years ago. We are excellent at collecting it but have got to get more inventive at using it. It cuts right through into other areas of policy. It can help answer questions like why people miss hospital appointments or job interviews by revealing structural barriers that are invisible to us at the moment. The data can cut through to causes and effects far beyond forecasting travel patterns if we ask the right questions.”

The message is that more intelligent transport systems can deliver not only smarter highways but better social policy outcomes across the board from better education to better health. Which raises the question of funding: who pays and who benefits?

“We need a more constructive discussion of the cost/benefit equation,” argues Martin. ‘It really must be a cross-sector conversation. It is ironic that transport professionals are often so bad at building these networks.”

Martin claims it’s a discussion that will need to happen soon if it is to keep up with the changes to travel patterns that could be on their way via ITS. She already has one eye focused on Finland and the experiment with ‘MaaS’ or ‘Mobility as a Service’, for example. Each MaaS user buys a single transport super-pass for a period that covers all of her or his travel needs from flights to car clubs to parking. It simplifies the transport experience and encourages better, more responsive provision. It will need some fearsome back-office support to make it work, especially in a more complex environment like the UK, but it would be foolish to bet against something like MaaS setting the pace for transport policy of the future.

Martin says that however we experience transport, ITS is already a part of it, even if it is only that faulty traffic  light  that brings it to mind. But what comes next could be about to take that to a new level. The public and politicians are already more excited about the possibilities than ever before with self-driving and electric vehicles regularly in the news. The doors to the backroom have already opened that little bit, perhaps this is the moment to give them a proper thrust.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Private cars may be more popular post-Covid, experts warn
    April 22, 2020
    Concerns over infection will make people uneasy about using public transport - even after the world emerges from the coronavirus pandemic, say experts.
  • When speed compliance becomes a safety issue
    March 29, 2017
    David Crawford finds that softly, softly can be safely, safely when it comes to speed enforcement. Comedians and controversial TV presenters have long made jokes about having to watch the speedometer so closely as they pass speed camera after speed camera that they mow down bus queues. But the joke may have some factual basis according to a study by researchers from the University of Western Australia.
  • Taking tolling towards new opportunities
    May 18, 2016
    Vinci’s André Broto presented his views on how the tolling industry could play an important role in helping authorities ease urban congestion, to delegates at the IBTTA conference. As director of foresight and strategy at Vinci Autoroutes, France, André Broto has been spending some time considering the future of tolling in his own country and worldwide. He presented his thoughts, which include a very different angle of the causes of, and solutions to, congestion at the IBTTA’s (International Bridge, Tunnel
  • Elon Musk’s underground movement
    August 3, 2020
    The Boring Company is building tunnels under various US cities – but for what? Kristina Smith delves deep into a project which may (eventually) have real appeal for mass transit providers and transportation agencies