Skip to main content

Iteris spreads the word that ITS is essential to reducing carbon emissions

Iteris is spreading one of the most important messages in the transportation industry: ITS can help reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions today. On Monday, two Iteris associate vice presidents for transportation systems, John Lower and Sam Morrissey, took the stage in an ITS University session to make the case. “The focus of the session was to reinforce the reality that ITS can manage movement of traffic to meet environmental goals that we all share and combat the misunderstanding that ITS drives an increas
June 15, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
John Lower (left) and Sam Morrissey of Iteris

73 Iteris is spreading one of the most important messages in the transportation industry: ITS can help reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions today. On Monday, two Iteris associate vice presidents for transportation systems, John Lower and Sam Morrissey, took the stage in an ITS University session to make the case.

“The focus of the session was to reinforce the reality that ITS can manage movement of traffic to meet environmental goals that we all share and combat the misunderstanding that ITS drives an increase in traffic,” said Lower. During the session, Iteris cited a study conducted recently in Pasadena, Calif. – the first real-world documentation that ITS can reduce emissions. The study involved traffic signal synchronisation, and the results showed a citywide reduction in GHG emissions by over one metric tonne per day. This was achieved by improving the flow of traffic and reducing congestion.

“Greenhouse gas emissions are increasing around the world,” Morrissey confirmed, “and we need to do something.

ITS can be a positive element in a multi-stage approach today.”

In addition to traffic signal synchronisation, other ITS technologies vital to GHG emissions reduction include traffic incident management, ramp metering, construction zone management, traveller information systems, transit signal priority and bicycle signal detection at traffic signals.

“Utilising ITS for carbon reduction is aligned with US DoT's Smart City initiative; California's emission reduction target' and the Paris Agreement on climate change,” Morrissey added. “ITS needs to be embraced as a solution.”

Iteris is taking this campaign on the road. Next stop: the ITS California annual meeting, September 19-21 in Indian Wells.

Meanwhile, Iteris urges ITSA members to carry the message to the transportation industry and the US public: ITS can be an essential component of climate management.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ITS America Annual Meeting - setting the scene
    May 1, 2012
    Gloria J. Jeff, District of Columbia Department of Transportation, and one of the co-chairs of the 2012 Annual Meeting Organizing Committee, sets the scene on what will be this year’s most important event for the ITS industry.
  • Maharashtra confirms hyperloop route in India
    February 26, 2018
    Virgin Hyperloop One (VHO) has signed an agreement with the Indian State of Maharashtra to create a route that intends to link central Pune, Navi Mumbai International Airport in 25minutes and connect 26 million people. It aims to eventually support 150 passenger trips annually and save more than 90 million hours of travel time. In addition, an initial pre-feasibility study by VHO indicates that the route could provide socio-economic benefits valued $55m (£39m) over 30 years of operation. It will be deploy
  • California to require all bus fleets to be zero-emission by 2040
    December 18, 2018
    The California Air Resources Board (CARB) has approved a statewide regulation which will require public transit agencies to gradually transition to fully zero emission buses by 2040. The Clean Transit regulation is expected to help transit agencies reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 19 million metric tonnes, nitrogen oxides by 7,000 tonnes and particulate matter by 40 tonnes from 2020 to 2050. CARB says the regulation will improve air quality, especially in low-income communities. It could also help
  • Michigan DOT director joins committee to study the future of interstates
    August 30, 2016
    Sixty years after president Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the Federal Highway Act 1956 into law, the US National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine is to carry out a 30 month study of the future of the country’s interstate highway system. Michigan Department of Transportation director Kirk T. Steudle has been named as a member of the committee that will study the future of the US Interstate Highway System (IGS).