Skip to main content

IRF task forces gear up for upcoming Dubai World Meeting

The International Road Federation is coordinating several member-led initiatives to achieve industry consensus around emerging trends that will be featured at the 18th IRF World Meeting & Exhibition on November 7th-10th, 2021 in Dubai.
March 18, 2021 Read time: 3 mins

 

An IRF taskforce is being established to produce globally applicable recommendations on adapting road infrastructure design, construction and operations to the new needs of Autonomous Vehicles (AV).

AVs are a game-changing evolution in personal mobility, however, design guidelines for highway and traffic engineers remain silent on the question. On account of their long lifespan, current and future road infrastructure assets will increasingly need to factor changing needs to support the future deployment of these vehicles.

The taskforce’s scope includes measures to enhance the quality and uniformity of traffic control devices, intelligent transportation system devices, digital navigation maps, as well as road structures. Where applicable, potential agency actions for readiness will also be considered by the taskforce, including roadway classification systems that indicate a network’s ability to support autonomous road traffic.

The IRF initiative comes at a time when US authorities are proposing an update to the Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices, which standardises traffic signs, signals, pavement markings, and work zone devices. Meanwhile, the European Commission has acknowledged that the growing uptake of automated driver assistance systems rely on the quality and good detectability of road markings and has announced plans to draft a common set of specifications for road markings and traffic signs.  

IRF taskforces seek another flagship initiative to gather global consensus on policies and programs that support the deployment of Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) in mitigating the impacts of global warming.

It seems self-evident that smarter mobility should form part of this equation.  After all, traffic that moves around more efficiently consumes less fuel. ITS can also enable real-time mobility pricing, and access control to low emission zone city centres. But it took the sector until a congress in the French city of Bordeaux in September 2019 to begin the task of categorising and quantifying the potential climate benefits of ITS.

Potential ITS measures explored by the taskforce comprise a wide range of tools such as electromobility, connected and automated vehicles, traffic management, public transport, city logistics and Mobility as a Service. The taskforce will address how these tools, supported by policies at the local and national level, can be optimised and deployed for maximum contribution to CO2 emission reduction targets.

“By engaging in a broad dialogue with the global community of public and private sector stakeholders ahead of the IRF World Meeting, these taskforces seek to deliver meaningful recommendations which will contribute to future-proofing road design” according to Dr Rob Jaffe, Chair of the IRF Committee on ITS

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The second ERF LAB event: 10 years down the road?
    October 24, 2019
    The second ERF LAB event* in Brussels examined the ‘Impact of new mobility on road infrastructure and equipment’, writes Christophe Nicodème, director-general of the ERF
  • FEHRL holds successful infrastructure research event in Brussels
    June 22, 2015
    FEHRL recently held the FIRM15 event in Brussels, focussing on innovative maintenance of transport infrastructure In all some 110 transport infrastructure research experts from Europe and beyond met for the 2015 FEHRL Infrastructure Research Meeting (FIRM15) at the Diamant Centre in Brussels, Belgium. These professionals discussed the overall theme of 'Innovative maintenance of transport infrastructure: Faster, cheaper, more reliable, safer and greener'. Throughout the two-day conference, several solution
  • Safety first at IRF Caribbean Regional Congress in Jamaica
    July 7, 2015
    The wealth of experiences and ideas shared during the recent 4th IRF Caribbean Regional Congress underscored the International Road Federation’s value in shaping policy contributions to global transportation challenges ranging from resilient infrastructure to road safety. The regional congress coincided with the start of the 3rd United Nations Global Road Safety Week, an initiative aimed at fostering discussion and awareness-raising in more than 100 countries. The event was run by the IRF Washington office
  • Planning the world's rural transport systems
    February 8, 2012
    China Hosts Major International Convention on Rural Roads. Given the crucial importance of rural roads in the global development context, IRF is according the issue priority focus this year by co-hosting its 2nd International Convention on Rural Roads. This will be convened in Jinan City, Shandong, China, from 26-29 October 2010, in association with the global Transport Knowledge Partnership (gTKP) and the China Highway and Transportation Society (CHTS). Following the landmark success of the inaugural IRF g