Skip to main content

UK moves to disclose road data to app makers

The UK is proposing to share road network data, including roadworks, with makers of mobile apps to warn drivers of potential congestion months in advance. The information for navigational apps powered by artificial intelligence would warn of planned changes to the road network, including work zone arrangements, which would enhance worker safety. Tech firms could soon get access to the necessary data thanks to a UK government review of legislation around Traffic Regulation Orders. The orders behind res
August 28, 2019 Read time: 2 mins
The review of Traffic Regulation Orders will support the government’s Future of Mobility Grand Challenge (photo courtesy of the UK government)
The UK is proposing to share road network data, including roadworks, with makers of mobile apps to warn drivers of potential congestion months in advance.


The information for navigational apps powered by artificial intelligence would warn of planned changes to the road network, including work zone arrangements, which would enhance worker safety.

Tech firms could soon get access to the necessary data thanks to a UK government review of legislation around Traffic Regulation Orders. The orders behind restrictions on the road network which allow for temporary roadworks or permanent changes to the road.

The announcement will help open up data, reducing congestion, pollution and frustration for road users, according to a statement by George Freeman, UK Minister for Future Transport.

“Working with organisations including local authorities and the connected and automated vehicle sector, the department will look at introducing legislation to make it easier to access data around the predicted 50,000 yearly road closures building on the government’s commitment to make travelling cleaner and greener, safer, easier and more reliable,” he said.

He said the review of the orders will support the government’s Future of Mobility Grand Challenge by considering whether current legislation is fit to maximise the potential of future technologies.

The government also noted that opening up Traffic Regulation Orders data could help with route planning systems for self-driving vehicles, “cementing the UK’s position as a world leader in developing self-driving vehicle technology”.

Related Content

  • Success of toll road operators' conference
    July 12, 2012
    The 37th ASECAP Annual Study and Information Days held in Krakow, Poland, gathered some 300 road transport CEOs, experts and government decision-makers making the event "a huge success." Patrick Smith reports Toll road operators from across Europe have met to discuss the state of their businesses in the current economic climate and how to tackle it. Fabrizio Palenzona, the outgoing President of ASECAP (the European professional Association of Operators of Toll Road Infrastructures) and president of AISCAT (
  • Smombies! Look out!
    February 12, 2021
    Our city streets are being invaded by smartphone zombies, but help is on the way
  • Morocco’s minister for Equipment and Transport discusses the IRF Marrakech conference
    April 3, 2013
    The magic of Morocco will form an idyllic backdrop for one of the landmark events on this year’s IRF calendar: the major regional conference focusing on North Africa & the Mediterranean which is being hosted in Marrakech on 19-20 March. Abdelaziz Rabbah, the Moroccan minister of Equipment & Transport will set the tone by welcoming delegates to a special high-level segment, which will open the event in the presence of dignitaries and senior officials drawn from throughout the region. This will include keynot
  • Innovative traffic information technology used in Vancouver
    April 12, 2012
    As the world descended on Vancouver for the 2010 Winter Olympics, visitors were able to travel around the city with confidence and intelligence thanks to a landmark project by IRF Member, Delcan