Skip to main content

Decarbonising transport

Decarbonising transport with digital twins
By MJ Woof January 7, 2025 Read time: 1 min
Heriot Watt University in Edinburgh will lead research into the use of digital twins to decarbonise transport – image courtesy of © Mapics| Dreamstime.com


A new research hub will lead the use of digital twins in determining how transport systems can be decarbonised quickly, safely and cheaply.  The TransiT Hub, led by Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh and the University of Glasgow, is supported by a £46 million investment from the UKRI Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) and 67 partners.    

Employing digital twins means real-world data can be analysed to test and improve different scenarios. The digital twin can then send back its solution for an improved process to the physical world in near real-time.   

This could help motorists and reduce carbon emissions, for example through updating digital road signs with information on the shortest route out of traffic jams. It will also allow analysis of how parts of a future decarbonised transport system work, for example electric road systems and alternative fuels.    

Speeding up the way new systems are tested will help to identify the lowest-cost pathways to net zero carbon emissions, such as through helping logistics companies to identify sustainable routes, vehicle types and journey times.   

 

Related Content

  • Five roads of the future – cutting transport costs
    June 10, 2019
    Advances in road design and construction will deliver cost savings In the past 50 years there have been huge advancements in the automobile industry but the roads we drive on remain nearly unchanged. As cars get smarter so too should the infrastructure that supports them. Our planet is covered in roads. And by 2050 our global network of highways is projected to increase by 60%. Volvo Construction Equipment takes a look at possible technologies for the roads of the future, looking at some innovations
  • Self-healing roads to address pothole problem?
    February 4, 2025
    Self-healing roads using biomass could address the pothole problem.
  • Efficient asset management delivers
    April 25, 2013
    Maximising the economic benefit of infrastructure assets can be achieved through delivering better quality maintenance. Increasing utilisation of infrastructure follows on from those assets being in better condition. Clearly by tracking infrastructure condition closely, huge gains can be made in addressing technical issues before they become more serious and more costly, as well as minimising disruption. In UK city Birmingham, high resolution aerial photography from Bluesky is helping the city council under
  • Life DYNAMAP: real-time mapping of road infrastructure noise
    October 15, 2015
    The world’s best road infrastructure project can also have the world’s worst traffic noise problem. But where to start defeating this noise pollution? Road traffic noise is one of the most obvious aspects affecting the quality of life in urban areas. To combat this, local, national and international authorities have developed initiatives to avoid, prevent or reduce exposure to noise. One of these initiatives – Life DYNAMAP – is underway by a group of researchers in Germany, Spain and Italy. The project is f