Traditional smart transportation approaches to address traffic
congestion, safety, pollution, and other urbanization challenges are
expected to hit scalability and efficiency obstacles by the end of this
decade. Traveler information systems such as variable-message signs,
intelligent traffic lights, camera-enforced urban tolling, and traffic
monitoring centers will ultimately prove ineffective and prohibitively
expensive, threatening to stall economic growth, especially in
developing regions. According to ABI Research, global yearly spend on
traffic management systems alone will exceed US$10 billion by 2020.
“What will really be required is a step change towards virtualizing
smart transportation solutions via in-vehicle technology, and
cloud-based control systems whereby information is sent directly to and
from the car, bypassing physical roadside infrastructure all together.
Low latency, peer-to-peer, and meshed-network type connectivity based on
DSRC-enabled V2V, 4G, and—in the next decade—5G, will be critical
enablers of this transformation,” comments VP and Practice Director
Dominique Bonte.
ITS virtualization will heavily rely on big data with car OEMs such as
Toyota, Volvo, and PSA already exploring generating hyperlocal weather
and/or traffic services from car probe data, to be shared with both
other nearby vehicles and—in aggregated from—governments and road
operators. Other examples include Continental’s partnership with HERE
and IBM on its dynamic eHorizon solution.
However, a closed-loop systems approach will ultimately become the key
paradigm, allowing Artificial Intelligence-powered self-steering and
learning demand-response solutions influencing traffic levels through
dynamic speed limits and variable road use and toll charges. Autonomous
vehicles, in an ironic twist, will be managed collectively and
controlled centrally, remotely and dynamically adjusting routing and
other parameters.
This study covers big ITS data, physical roadside transportation
infrastructure virtualization technologies, and a systems approach to
transportation management. Relevant connectivity, analytics, cloud
platform, security, and identity technologies are also described. These
findings are part of ABI Research’s Smart
Transportation Market Research (https://www.abiresearch.com/market-research/service/intelligent-transportation-systems/).