Skip to main content

VIDEO: Yeti ploughs ahead

Yeti Snow Technology, a developer of autonomous snow clearance systems for airports, will scale back pilot projects this winter and focus on software development.
November 15, 2019 Read time: 3 mins

Yeti Snow Technology, a developer of autonomous snow clearance systems for airports, will scale back pilot projects this winter and focus on software development.

The company says that it has developed an advanced system for self-driving vehicles that is used in environments with high demands for safety, precision and reliability. So far, the focus has been on clearing snow from airport runways and more than 40 tests were carried out at Oslo Airport during the past winter, 2018/19.

The push this winter will be on developing more sophisticated software,  John Halden, general manager for Yeti Snow Technology, told 3260 World Highways. “There is a big gap between successful pilot projects and successful commercialisation of the product. The aim is to start delivery of the system to an airport in the winter of 2020-2021.

While most of the system will be autonomous, there will probably always be a driver in one of the snowploughs, for safety, either in the first vehicle or in a command vehicle within the group on the runway, explained Halden. “The goal is not to remove all the people from the work because every airport has its own safety rules and processes depending on runway layouts.”

Earlier this year there were also trial runs of vehicles at Örnsköldsvik Airport, a regional airport around 525km north of the Swedish capital Stockholm and built in 1961. It was recently upgraded to take larger aircraft catering for longer European flights and handles just under 80,000 passengers annually. In late 2014, the airport received permission to have the first remote-controlled control tower in the world. The tower is controlled from Sundsvall-Timrå Airport.

It was last year that, for the first time, autonomous snowploughs, 20m long and 5.5m wide, cleared snow from a runway at Fagernes Airport in Leirin, Norway, 200km north of Oslo. The snowploughs had enough capacity to clear an area of 357,500m² within an hour. They can clear snow in formation, several vehicles working together, no matter the weather, according to the company.

Yeti Snow Technology was set up in 2015 by Semcon, a developer of autonomous systems for vehicles, and Øveraasen Snow Removal Systems, a Norwegian family business that been developing and manufacturing snow ploughs, snow blowers and runway sweepers for more than 80 years. In 2013, Øveraasen delivered what it said is the world’s largest snow blower to Oslo Airport Gardermoen – “a mega blower” with more than 1,640kw of power. Yeti was created originally to develop autonomous snowploughs for Norwegian airport operator Avinor. Øveraasen.

Semcon is also a developer of technology for the Swedish Civil Aviation Administration – LFV - as part of its Autonomous Vehicles for Airports projects. Husqvarna, RISE, FlyPulse, Swedavia and Combitech are among the other companies working on various sub-projects as part of the initiative.

In September, Semcon and Øveraasen announced a new partner in Yeti Snow Technology - Husqvarna Group, a global maker of grass-cutting equipment that has an autonomous technology division whose products include robotic lawnmowers. The three companies now have equal ownership of Yeti.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ARTBA presents transport safety awards
    October 1, 2015
    The American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s Transportation Development Foundation (ARTBA-TDF) has presented awards to five separate industry initiatives. These were highlighted for commitment to promoting safety during the association’s 17th annual Roadway Work Zone Safety Awareness Awards held recently at a luncheon during ARTBA’s National Convention in Philadelphia. The competition recognises outstanding programmes, campaigns and technologies aimed at helping reduce roadway work zone a
  • Airport preparation through compaction
    April 12, 2018
    Two major airport projects around the world are being constructed on poor ground and have required extensive compaction - Mike Woof writes With air travel continuing to increase around the world, airport capacity is being upgraded in many major cities. Two of the world’s largest mega cities, Beijing and Istanbul, are constructing new airports to cope with growing demand. This is because the existing facilities are simply unable to cope with projected growth for aviation and some of the airports are alrea
  • Brokk offers painless bridge work
    February 10, 2020
    Peter Bigwood* makes the case for using remote-controlled demolition machines to demolish bridge decks
  • HEXAGON LIVE - making the digital world become a reality
    June 3, 2015
    HEXAGON LIVE - the digital world becomes reality. Everyone in the construction and infrastructure maintenance sector faces the same great challenge - create reality with design through efficiency. But, as designs become more complex, how to gain efficiency is the real trick. These challenges are overcome only by people dedicated to solving problems. That puts them among the world’s innovators, said Ola Rollen, chief executive of technology information company Hexagon, during his welcoming keynote address to