Skip to main content

UK DfT looks to the future with Mott MacDonald

Infrastructure firm appointed 'Futures and Foresight Support Advisor' to DfT
By Mike Woof June 19, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Mott says futures thinking plays key role in strategic policy making (© Mingis | Dreamstime.com)

Mott MacDonald has been re-appointed by the UK’s Department for Transport (DfT) to serve as its "Futures and Foresight Support Advisor" - a key role in determining the future of UK transport. 

It means infrastructure specialist Mott MacDonald will support the DfT in embedding ‘futures thinking’ into its strategic planning and decision-making processes, enabling the department to explore long-term trends, uncertainties and emerging challenges.  

Futures thinking is at the heart of the shift towards vision-led transport planning, helping ensure that transport policies and investments are resilient and forward-looking, enabling a transport future that is sustainable, efficient and user-centric. 

The work will draw on the Government Office for Science’s Futures Toolkit, a resource designed to help public sector organisations navigate complex and uncertain futures. Through their application, the DfT can better anticipate how societal, technological and environmental changes may influence transport needs and behaviours. 

The appointment falls under the DfT’s STARThree framework (Specialist Technical and Commercial Advice for Rail and other transport systems).

Since first being appointed in 2019, Mott MacDonald has contributed to a wide range of strategic initiatives across all transport modes including rail, road, aviation and maritime. Notable contributions include input into the recently published Transport Artificial Intelligence Action Plan and the Transport Decarbonisation Plan. 

Mott MacDonald will be supported by a consortium of expert partners including City Science, Connected Economics, Reed Mobility, the School of International Futures, Systra and the University of the West of England.  

Annette Smith, Mott MacDonald’s project director for DfT Futures, said: “Being re-appointed as the Department for Transport’s Futures and Foresight Advisors for the fourth time is testament to the strength of our partnership and the role futures thinking plays in strategic policy making."

"It has been instrumental in helping the DfT develop forward-looking policies that are shaping the future of transport, and we are excited to continue this journey with them.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Traffic cameras embrace AI
    December 19, 2022
    Artificial intelligence is spreading into many aspects of mobility – but what about traffic management and enforcement cameras? ITS International invited a few vision experts to ponder a couple of leading questions…
  • Cubic wins multi-million transit upgrade contract in Ireland
    December 19, 2014
    Cubic Transportation Systems has won a major multi-million euro modernisation programme for Iarnród Éireann, Irish Rail. Cubic led a team of four providers with specialist transport expertise to deliver the best solution for Irish Rail’s new fully integrated ticketing management and distribution system. The combined capabilities of Cubic and Sqills, along with its other delivery partners, CRMCulture and Rail Solutions, also meet the requirements of Irish Rail’s Customer First Programme, which puts the cu
  • US ITS sector needs strategic leadership
    January 31, 2012
    The US is losing its advantage in the ITS sector because of a lack of strategic leadership, according to a new report from the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation. Here, Stephen Ezell, one of the report's authors, talks to ITS International about what can be done to remedy the situation. A new report from the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF), Explaining International IT Leadership: Intelligent Transportation Systems, makes for sobering reading within the US ITS community.
  • ITS needs to talk the talk as well as walk the walk
    March 24, 2014
    The US automated enforcement market is in rude health as the number of systems and applications continues to grow and broaden. Jason Barnes reports. Blessed and cursed – arguably, in equal measure – with a constitution which stresses the right to self-expression and determination, the US has had a harder journey than most to the more widespread use of automated traffic enforcement systems. In some cases, opposition to the concept has been extreme – including the murder of a roadside civil enforcement offici