Beijing is planning to adopt a series of intelligent
transportation systems (ITS) to alleviate the city's traffic
congestion, officials said.
The use of high-tech devices in buses, taxis, public car parks
and bus stations will greatly improve the transportation
efficiency, said Liu Xiaoming, deputy director of Beijing Municipal
Committee of Communication.
Liu told a news conference yesterday about the plan and
officially announced the 14th World Congress on ITS will be held in
Beijing Exhibition Center in October 2007.
"Road construction and expansion will be affected badly without
using ITS," Liu said.
ITS can be used in many traffic-related areas.
Bus stops can be equipped with electronic boards, showing when
different buses will arrive. It allows passengers to know how long
they need to wait for their buses.
Electronic parking map guidance systems in cars can also
pinpoint available spaces to drivers.
And electronic bus tickets can serve as a kind of indicator for
bus companies to know when and where the bus service is needed
most.
"The core of ITS is to improve the efficiency, convenience and
security of transportation and reduce pollution," said Wang
Xiaojing, director of the National Intelligent Transportation
System Centre.
The traffic development plan in the next five years in Beijing
includes guiding systems for parking, signal and controlling
systems for traffic police, global positioning systems (GPS) for
vehicles, and non-stop tolling systems for drivers.
"Combining information technology with the conventional
transportation system marks a new traffic era, which will supply
safe and efficient transport to both drivers and passengers," Wang
said.
China started research on ITS in the mid-1990s
Beijing won the right to host the 14th world ITS session in
November 2003.
China is believed to be the first developing country to host the
conference, following the United States, the UK, Japan and other
developed nations.
(China Daily March 1, 2006)