Can AI really solve Britain’s traffic problems?
New Government scheme will allow tech companies to access live congestion data
The Government has announced plans to open roadwork information to tech companies in a bid to alleviate congestion.
The Department for Transport (DfT) claims that making data available to tech firms could spawn the “next generation of navigational apps” that use artificial intelligence (AI) to inform motorists about disruption “months in advance”.
Not only does the DfT hope that the technology will help alleviate congestion, but it also predicts that the scheme will “improve air pollution by reducing the number of vehicles in traffic hotspots”, Motor1 reports.
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“As a road user, there is nothing more frustrating than discovering roadworks and getting stuck in traffic jams”, said George Freeman, minister of future transport.
He added that the move will “help open up data, reducing congestion, pollution and frustration for road users.”
How would “next-gen navigation apps” work?
According to The Daily Telegraph, app makers will be given access a host of information ranging from “changes to signs and speed limits to road closures from roadworks or street parties”.
With that information, navigation apps and devices can provide users with a more accurate plan of their journey, the newspaper says.
While some navigation maps, such as Waze, often alert drivers to police sightings and temporary average speed check zones, they require users to actively inform others of notable changes. This means that a driver could be warned about roadworks that are not present on their journey.
The DfT’s scheme, meanwhile, suggests that navigation app and device makers would be fed traffic information in real-time.
But before the technology makes its way into the public domain, the department will undertake a review of Traffic Regulation Orders - a “legal tool” that lets the authorities shut roads to carry out temporary roadworks and make “permanent changes” to the network, explains Auto Express.
So will it solve Britain’s traffic problems?
That remains to be seen, but the ever-growing reliance on sat-nav systems means the scheme could be a hit with drivers.
The Telegraph notes that drivers in the UK last year lost an average of 178 hours as a result of traffic. This cost drivers a total of £7.9bn in 2018, which breaks down as an average of £1,317 per driver.
London is currently ranked the sixth most congested city in the world, where drivers lose an average of 227 hours per year as a result of traffic, the newspaper says.
There are already a number of “smart motorways” scattered across the UK, which are equipped with traffic-monitoring sensors to detect congestion and road accidents. If the stretch of motorway is prone to congestion, a variable speed limit may be introduced to prevent drives from entering a traffic hotspot at high speed.
But the new scheme will provide apps with information to offer motorists alternative routes, Auto Express reports. This could prove to be a more effective way of alleviating traffic, as drivers will be given more accurate information to plan their journey.
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