Skip to main content

TomTom launches of International Traffic Foundation

A year since committing to reduce congestion for all in its Traffic Manifesto, TomTom today launches the world's first Traffic Foundation dedicated to fostering collaboration and nurturing talent in the field of traffic management.
April 30, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A year since committing to reduce congestion for all in its Traffic Manifesto, 3972 TomTom today launches the world’s first Traffic Foundation dedicated to fostering collaboration and nurturing talent in the field of traffic management.

The not-for-profit TomTom International Traffic Foundation will bring together key stakeholders from academia, industry and policy-making with the aim to help reduce traffic congestion. The Foundation will nurture talent in the field of traffic management, funding PhD and post-doctorate research, publishing research papers and hosting a number of traffic-related events.

"The launch of the TomTom International Traffic Foundation is an important step towards our goal of reducing congestion for all, as set out in our Traffic Manifesto," says Harold Goddijn, chief executive officer of TomTom. "Traffic is a universal issue that impacts the individual, business and society as a whole. The Foundation will bring together the best global thinkers to look at traffic management from every angle."

The TomTom International Traffic Foundation will fund two PhDs and two post-Doctorate research projects annually into Traffic Management and Knowledge Technology. Successful candidates will be selected on a case-by-case basis. The research topics for 2012 will be:

    Engineering models for traffic management
    Vehicle-to-vehicle or vehicle-to-server communication
    Physics of transport and traffic

2012 will also see TomTom fund research into a topic that aligns with the EU policy on Transport: ‘Creating standards in the field of road transport’ at European level. This relates to the EU Directive 2010/40/EU on the framework for the deployment of Intelligent Transport Systems in the field of road transport and for interfaces with other modes of transport.

In September 2010 TomTom outlined 20 actions points that would contribute to traffic congestion reduction globally. For an update on its progress over the last 12 months, click this %$Linker: External 0 0 0 oLinkExternal link Tom Tom false http://www.tomtom.com/landing_pages/trafficmanifesto/index-project.php?Lid=4 false false%>.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • International Transport Forum: public vs private policy debate
    December 4, 2014
    Simply banning cars in parts of major cities will not necessarily greatly improve the air quality over time, a new report has found. The answer for cutting carbon emissions is to get the right balance of private and public transportation along with infrastructure developed to sustain the mix, according to the International Transport Forum (ITF), a think tank within the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). The ITF evaluated the potential impact of transport policies on urban carbon
  • ERF aims to boost the voice of road infrastructure in EU research policy
    July 1, 2013
    As of 1 January 2014, the European Union's (EU's) next Multi-Annual Financial Framework for the period 2014–2020 will come into effect. One of the key components of this European strategy aimed at boosting competitiveness and increasing Europe’s innovation potential is the EU’s Strategic Framework for Research and Development called ‘Horizon 2020’. Recognising that without research and development, Europe cannot maintain the industrial leadership it currently holds in many areas, European leaders look set t
  • IRF launches Innovation Award for Road Transport
    February 9, 2012
    No it's not a question posed by a precocious toddler or a rather senile judge but rather the name of an exciting new international competition launched by IRF and its global Transport Knowledge Partnership (gTKP) programme. InARoad (the Innovation Award for Road Transport in Developing Countries) has been created to recognise exemplary projects that have made significant impacts on transport in developing countries as well as to reward innovative and sustainable good practices in this field.
  • Deadline for submitting European Transport Conference 2014 abstracts
    February 3, 2014
    Tomorrow is the deadline for submitting abstracts to the European Transport Conference (ETC) 2014. The ETC connects the worlds of research, consultancy, policy and practice. Attendance at ETC allows different groups to pose questions to fellow professionals and to assess what is possible in terms of delivery. Researchers are challenged by policy-makers; practitioners need to deliver on the ground what the policy-makers want. The Association for European Transport has identified for the 2014 Conference so