Sweden’s Transport Administration (
     
The demonstration area will be built in the bus lane along 1km of Getingevägen Road near central Lund. Construction will begin during the first quarter of 2020 and last for three years.
     
The project’s budget is €9.3 million of which Trafikverket will contribute €8.3 million with the other consortium players supplying the remaining funds.
     
Lund is a historic town of around 91,000 people with cobbled streets and home to Lund University, one of Sweden’s oldest educational institutes. The city also has one of Europe’s most developed cycling infrastructure. There are 4,800 bike parking spaces in the town, including a multi-storey facility at the railway station, more than 260km of bicycle paths and lanes. The government estimates that around 43% of journeys within the city are by bicycle.
     
The Elväg Syd consortium, which includes state, educational and private sector players, will use technology developed by one of the consortium members, Elonroad. Other members are Innovation Skåne coming on board as project manager, Kraftringen Energi, Lund municipality, Lund University of Technology, Skånetrafiken, Solaris Sverige and Sweden’s National Road and Transport Research Institute (
 
The test road is based on a 200m long test track set up outside Lund in  2017 (see video). Elonroad’s concept involves a conductive rail - 5cm  high and 30cm wide - laid on top of the asphalt or concrete road  surface. The rail acts as a recharging infrastructure for electric  vehicles with electric motors and batteries – although the Lund test  site will be for only buses. The rail also has inclined sides to make it  smooth for vehicles when drivers change lanes. 
     
The  rail consisting of short grounded segments are arranged along a single  track. Every second segment can switch to positive when a car passes  over it. Three contactors will supply a steady current rectified with  diodes before charging the battery.
     
Rainwater  passes under the road. During winter, snow can be removed by a special  plow developed by Elonroad. Ice on the top surface of the rail will be  melted by a heating system. A grounded strip will stop leaking current  from the positive segment under the vehicle.
     
When  the driver exits the rail system, the vehicle’s batteries take over for  non-electric roads. Batteries take over automatically at exits and  roundabouts.
    
        
        


