Skip to main content

Catering for MaaS Delivery

Newton’s first law of motion states that: Every object in a state of uniform motion tends to remain in that state of motion unless an external force is applied to it. While the concept moving bodies has a rather obvious analogy with transport, the law can equally be applied to transportation as a whole – that everything stays the same until an external force acts up on it.
August 5, 2016 Read time: 2 mins

Newton’s first law of motion states that: Every object in a state of uniform motion tends to remain in that state of motion unless an external force is applied to it. While the concept moving bodies has a rather obvious analogy with transport, the law can equally be applied to transportation as a whole – that everything stays the same until an external force acts up on it.

Call it an external force, call it a disrupter, the transport sector has seem many and they are coming ever faster: real time traveller information, contactless ticketing, taxi hailing services, the sharing society and Generation Z to name but a few. And the biggest, or arguably the combination of all of the above, is yet to come: Mobility as a Service or MaaS.

Why is it bigger than Open Data or driverless cars? Because MaaS will change forever the whole basis on which transport is delivered. Instead of providing assets and infrastructure for the individual traveller to navigate, purchase and consume, MaaS will provide mobility: ‘tell us where you want to go and we will make all the arrangements to get you there and allow you to make a single payment’.

But this requires a complete rethink of transport provision, the infrastructure planning and traffic management, ticketing and modal interchanges, real-time information provision and even legislation. So how should transport authorities prepare for, facilitate and even participate in the provision of MaaS?

Well that’s the crucial question but one that cannot be answered in a leader column or even an entire magazine, so in March 2017 ITS International is organising a two-day MaaS Market Conference on the theme of Concept to Delivery in London.

Related Content

  • Seamless transport - the need for connectivity and sustainability
    February 6, 2012
    At the beginning of August, 2011, Carole Coune took up her new role as Secretary General of the International Transport Forum at the OECD. Here, she tells ITS International of the challenges and opportunities the global sector faces
  • A coalition of the willing: iATL
    April 5, 2024
    A living lab on the streets of Georgia, US, is helping to improve traffic safety by real-world deployments of technology. ITS International talks to the founder and some of the partners at the Infrastructure Automotive Technology Laboratory
  • Passport roundtable examines London’s kerb space priorities
    March 19, 2019
    UK congestion is getting worse, in part due to the influx of deliveries coming into cities. At a roundtable discussion in London, software provider Passport examined new ways in which local authorities can work together to better manage the kerb. Ben Spencer listens in Competition for kerb space is one of the major conundrums of modern urban mobility. Some authorities are being creative about it, but good practice is not widespread. “There are individual pockets of good work going on with cities who a
  • Lowering the barriers to combined control rooms
    March 29, 2017
    Integrating control rooms can improve traffic management, security and emergency response without excessive cost or compromising privacy. In the wake of the recent terrorist events in France and Germany where the transport system was exploited with deadly consequences, many governments and agencies are reviewing the security arrangements – particularly around popular and high profile events.