Skip to main content

Webinar: Future of intelligent mobility and its impact on transportation

Frost & Sullivan’s webinar on 10 June 2015 at 1500 GMT will discuss the perspectives on intelligent mobility from various regions of the world; the potential to achieve carbon emission reduction, congestion alleviation and per-capita carbon footprint reduction; the roadmap to achieve intelligent mobility and the role of gamification; and comparative analysis of OEM strategies to achieve intelligent mobility, including a case study. Speakers are Frost & Sullivan program manager Automotive & Transportation
June 1, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
2097 Frost & Sullivan’s webinar on 10 June 2015 at 1500 GMT will discuss the perspectives on intelligent mobility from various regions of the world; the potential to achieve carbon emission reduction, congestion alleviation and per-capita carbon footprint reduction; the roadmap to achieve intelligent mobility and the role of gamification; and comparative analysis of OEM strategies to achieve intelligent mobility, including a case study.

Speakers are Frost & Sullivan program manager Automotive & Transportation, Prana T. Natarajan, and senior consultant, Nick Ford.

Frost & Sullivan says that in an intelligent transportation network that embraces new mobility business models, we must think beyond automated vehicles. There is a need for a unified approach that reaps benefits across safety, fuel economy and better flow of traffic. This can only be done when vehicles are not only automated, but are capable of communicating with each other, have a better sense of eco-driving and embrace new mobility modes to achieve leaner commuting.

This webinar will showcase untapped opportunities for OEMs, transport authorities, mobility integrators and various other stakeholders.

“The concept of intelligent mobility focuses on defining a roadmap for all involved industry stakeholders, which aims to reduce traffic congestion by up to 25 percent and pollution by 15 percent by 2035,” says Natarajan.

To register, e-mail Katja Feick, Corporate Communications (link [email protected]) with your full name, job title, company name, company telephone number, and company email address, website, city, state and country.

Related Content

  • February 7, 2017
    European bike sharing market fuelled by innovations and government support
    New research by Frost & Sullivan, European Bike Sharing Market, Forecast to 2025, indicates that the bike sharing fleet will more than double in size from 151,302 units in 2016 to 341,250 units in 2025. Southern and Western Europe have high public bike sharing service (BSS) activity. About 196 cities in Southern Europe have more than 35,000 rental bikes; in Western Europe, 150 cities have nearly 70,000 rental bikes. Spain and France are the strongest markets, but the UK, Germany and Italy are expanding quic
  • March 26, 2021
    EU offers vision of mobility
    Major changes are in the air for ITS in Europe: José Diez of ERF considers what the European Commission’s newly-released policy strategy for sustainable and smart mobility will mean
  • November 18, 2016
    Biometric wearables ‘to disrupt the automotive industry’
    Advances in biometrics will radically transform the driving experience, health wellness and wellbeing (HWW) and security of vehicles by 2025, according to Frost and Sullivan. As one in three new passenger vehicles begin to feature fingerprint, iris, voice and gesture recognition, heart beat and brain wave monitoring, stress detection, fatigue, eyelid and facial monitoring and pulse detection, these will be driven by built-in, brought-in and cloud enabled technologies, the automotive biometrics network wi
  • February 20, 2014
    Are Detroit OEMs heading towards extinction if Apple acquires Tesla?
    Analyst comment from Frost & Sullivan indicates that the business consulting firm believes that Detroit OEMs are in trouble if Apple acquires Tesla and thinks that the rumours surrounding this potential acquisition have some fire behind them. According to automotive and transportation team leader Paraná Tharthiharan: "Apple has an arm that researches automated driving technology and Tesla is also interested in automated driving. Hence, the speculations carry more weight than mere rumours, as if about cel