Skip to main content

'No lack of political drive' on ITS

This issue of ITS International contains a feature article based on interviews with leading figures of the ITS associations of the United States, Europe, Japan and Malaysia. A key point made is the importance of political leadership or policy direction in driving take up and implementation of ITS technology. This industry actually need not complain of a lack of drive on the part of politicians, or so it seems from other projects reported in this issue. True, the US would welcome a new transport bill and the
June 11, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Jon Masters ITS International Editor
This issue of ITS International contains a feature article based on interviews with leading figures of the ITS associations of the United States, Europe, Japan and Malaysia. A key point made is the importance of political leadership or policy direction in driving take up and implementation of ITS technology.

This industry actually need not complain of a lack of drive on the part of politicians, or so it seems from other projects reported in this issue. True, the US would welcome a new transport bill and the promise of assistance for long term planning that reauthorisation would bring. ITS professionals in Malaysia also are hopeful of a political champion to drive their cause; to take systems such as electronic tolling onwards to next stages of development.

What Malaysia does have is a relatively new SPAD public transport commission championing and driving policies aimed at ambitious targets for modal shift. ITS technologies – smart ticketing, rapid transit signalling and information services – will be key to reaching the objectives. It is not SPAD’s responsibility to ensure the potential of ITS is exploited to the full. The ITS industry has that role to play, but it seems in Malaysia at least, ITS protagonists would be preaching to the converted. SPAD appears to have technology sewn up in its plans.

Political drive is not in short supply where there is sufficient need or reason for greater use of ITS systems. In Japan, for instance, shortcomings in emergency response following the country’s devastating earthquake and tsunami in 2011 have shown there is a real need for a different approach to coordinating transport logistics of relief efforts. The resulting initiative, making greater use of private sector vehicle data to ascertain and communicate safe supply routes, is being led by ITS Japan. But this is a national association backed closely by government agencies, in a country not short of political drive where technology and transport meet.

In Thailand and Mexico – in the State of Jalisco at least – it is ‘carnage’ on road networks that has driven political willpower and brought action in the form of ITS solutions. An innovative system of electronic vehicle registration (EVR) has taken shape in and around Bangkok making use of RFID tags, tamper evidence technology, tag readers and ALPR camera technology. Principal aims – and policy drivers – are enforcement of speed limits for the sake of road safety.

Results from Thailand’s EVR are looking promising so far, as they are in Jalisco, where state authorities are driving a programme using radar equipment for speed monitoring and enforcement.

The Jalisco authorities put their success down to a ‘multi-sectoral’ approach but the scheme clearly would not have been started at all without Jalisco’s political initiative. Nor would it have had such a marked effect without the state’s efforts communicating key messages to the motoring public of Guadalajara.

These are examples where the needs for ITS solutions are clear and routes to technological answers relatively easy to map out. Other ITS challenges are more complex. The Netherlands’ 4767 Rijkswaterstaat and 1841 UK Highways Agency have embarked on an initiative so apparently ambitious that their first move has been to ask industry if what they hope to achieve is possible; telematics specialists can only wait to see if usage based car insurance will take off in real terms this time around, with or without political backing. Where there is a real need, opportunity for ITS solutions will follow. Jon Masters

Related Content

  • February 28, 2013
    Developing Mexico's ITS standards and infrastructure
    Promoting open market conditions for ITS deployment remains a major part of Mexico’s recent infrastructure modernization program. Travis P Dunn, partner at D’Artagnan Consulting, looks at the progress so far. In the past six years, Mexico has embarked on an ambitious infrastructure modernization program, calling for the construction and improvement of more than 19,000km of road infrastructure and the deployment of advanced technologies that improve safety, efficiency, and convenience for road users. One of
  • December 4, 2012
    Assessing the potential of in-vehicle enforcement systems
    Jason Barnes considers the social and ethical ramifications of using in-vehicle safety technologies to fulfil enforcement functions. Although policy documents often imply close correlation between enforcement, compliance and safety – in part, as a counter to accusations that enforcement is rather more concerned with revenue generation – there is a noticeable reluctance among policy makers and auto manufacturers to exploit in-vehicle safety systems for enforcement applications. From a technical perspective t
  • January 7, 2013
    IRF takes politicians to task on road safety
    The International Road Federation has issued a wake up call to government ministers, in the form of its Vienna Manifesto on ITS. Four years on from coming to a key decision on ITS, the International Road Federation (IRF) now faces a further question – how can it ensure its Vienna Manifesto on ITS achieves maximum impact? This is a challenge the organisation is not taking lightly. Issues the manifesto has been drawn up to address have become more acute in the time taken to publish it and are forecast to wors
  • January 31, 2012
    US ITS sector needs strategic leadership
    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.