Skip to main content

Western Australia trials C-ITS technology

Main Roads WA said city of Perth is ready for connected vehicle technology
By David Arminas May 26, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Perth, Western Australia (© Travelling-light | Dreamstime.com)

Main Roads Western Australia and Kapsch TrafficCom have conducted a trial of connected vehicle technology on roads in Perth, Western Australia state.

Kapsch said the trial successfully demonstrated that both cooperative ITS (C-ITS) and the road infrastructure of Western Australia are ready for wide-spread deployment of such technology.

Mehdi Langroudi, executive director for network operations with Main Roads Western Australia, said the C-ITS Roadmap and C-ITS trials will help make the state’s roads safer as well as boost mobility and improve sustainability for generations to come. 

“Together with the industry, we look forward to supporting the implementation of a nationally harmonised C-ITS ecosystem across the Western Australian road network to enhance safety, movement, regional resilience, and enable future vehicle technology,” he said.

“Connected vehicle technology allows vehicles, infrastructure and traffic operators to share critical information quickly and directly,” noted Daniel Vazquez, executive vice president for the Asia-Pacific region at Kapsch. 

“That way, we can send alerts, for example about upcoming school zones or road works areas, directly into cars, improving safety for all traffic participants. In other tests, this technology has shown potential to reduce fatalities and serious accidents by up to 20%.”

The technology can be used to deliver critical information to drivers directly into their vehicles or onto their smartphones, allowing a more direct and immediate way of providing safety-relevant alerts to drivers, for example about changing weather conditions, vulnerable road user warnings or obstacles on the road.

Globally, countries including Germany, Ireland and the US are investing heavily in the technology, with Germany currently rolling out roadworks warnings across 13,000km of highways.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cisco, NXP invest in Cohda Wireless to enable the connected car
    January 7, 2013
    In a partnership that they say will advance intelligent transportation systems (ITS) and car-to-X communications, US-headquartered IT provider Cisco and Dutch semiconductor supplier NXP Semiconductors are to invest in wireless communications specialist Cohda Wireless. The three companies will apply their collective expertise and technologies to help automotive OEMs, suppliers, enterprises and consumers to connect vehicles with ITS infrastructure. This will be spearheaded by producing the first automotive-q
  • ‘How do you connect your dots with their dots?’
    May 24, 2022
    Ahead of the European Congress in Toulouse, Joost Vantomme tells Adam Hill how Ertico-ITS Europe is looking to bring partners together in pursuit of smarter and more sustainable mobility
  • Asecap: get ready to rethink everything you know
    November 15, 2022
    How can we make our infrastructure ready for new sustainability challenges? What kind of investments are needed? And who will finance them? Tolling association Asecap has some thoughts. Geoff Hadwick reports from Lisbon
  • London buses to trial safety technology
    March 31, 2014
    London buses will carry out a groundbreaking trial of optical and radar-based detection software this summer, helping to further reduce the number of collisions involving pedestrians and cyclists in London. The trials are part of Transport for London’s (TfL) draft Pedestrian Safety Action Plan, and will build on research previously carried out by TfL on detection equipment and will look to test the effectiveness of the technology for reducing collisions with cyclists and pedestrians.