Skip to main content

UK roads get Acusensus phone-detection units

Australian road safety company Acusensu says that it has taken delivery of the first of three trailer units to be positioned stationary along selected highways in England.
By David Arminas July 25, 2023 Read time: 3 mins
No escape: the trailer units capture images of front seat occupants and the software sends anonymised images to a secure cloud for human review later (image courtesy Acusensus)

After a year of pilot programmes, National Highways is rolling out more trailer units that detect mobile phone users along England’s major roads and motorways.

The UK business of Australian road safety company Acusensus says that it has taken delivery of the first of three new trailer units which will be positioned stationary along selected highways. Acusensus’ Heads-up hardware and software technology analyses in near real time images captured through vehicle windscreens. In this way the units can also detect if a driver and front passenger are wearing seatbelts.

When a possible case of distracted driving is identified by the software, anonymised images are sent to a secure cloud for human review later. A further secondary check will validate the initial analysis and then, if an offence is deemed to have occurred, allows for the creation of an offence file,. The file can be used by the police for prosecution, as has been done in the trials.

The forthcoming deployments follow successful pilots delivered with highways maintenance firm AECOM, National Highways – responsible for England’s main highways - and police forces across the UK. “We have been running our van-based safety checks on UK roads for more than a year now,” said Geoff Collins, general manager of Acusensus’ UK office.

“This extra trailer and the others that will soon join them means we can deploy our life-saving technology at specific locations for longer, getting a better idea of the scale of the problem, the number of repeat offenders and the types of drivers involved. This will help Highway Authorities and Police Forces to build a strategy to address these dangers, change behaviour and make our roads safer.”

Acusensus says figures from Australia's New South Wales state, where the first state-wide scheme rolled out in 2019, show the technology has had a significant impact on driver behaviour. The number of mobile phone detections dropped by a factor of six. It went from one in 82 drivers in 2019 to one in 478 drivers in 2021. A subsequent programme in Queensland state has similarly started to show active changes in behaviour, according to Acusensus.

The Acusensus’ Heads Up system won the ITS (UK) Enforcement Scheme of the Year Award in October last year.

Acusensus was founded in Australia 2018 with its patented Heads-Up camera software and hardware able to simultaneously detect speeding, mobile phone use, seatbelt compliance, illegal lane use and vehicles of interest. The company operates programmes in New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia and from 2023 in the Australia’s Capital Territory that includes Canberra, as well as several international jurisdictions. It also has a base in North America.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK police to start using drug testing kits on drivers
    January 8, 2013
    In the UK police are finally to be issued with a new drug testing kit. This development follows trials of testing technology able to detect the presence of illegal drugs using samples from drivers. The kit that has been approved by the UK authorities can analyse a mouth swab for traces of cannabis. Systems capable of determining the presence of other drugs are in development at present. This new kit for checking on the presence of cannabis will be used at police stations, and does away with the need to have
  • Waste-full paving in Australia
    November 18, 2022
    The use of waste materials in roads, including higher proportions of RAP, is gaining ground.
  • GHSA: Pedestrian deaths fall for second year
    July 18, 2025
    However, despite overall progress in the US, alarming trends continue for hit-and-run incidents, especially at night and in places where there are no sidewalks, according to the GHSA - Governors Highway Safety Association.
  • Surecam keeps Peoplesafe in the UK
    October 2, 2023
    Ringway Jacobs, a UK highway services provider, adopted the video-enabled lone worker protection service from Peoplesafe and Surecam earlier this year for its lone workers and maintenance teams including those doing walked visual inspections of footways and highways.