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US pitches wireless highway safety plan

US pitches wireless highway safety plan

By:  Jim Duffy  On: 13 Nov 2005 For: Network World (U.S.) Creator

The U.S. Department of Transportation and automakers are attempting to garner participation from the telecom industry in an ambitious project to enable nationwide wireless communication between cars and roadside facilities with the goal of heading off accidents and alleviating traffic congestion.

The U.S. Department of Transportation and automakers are attempting to garner participation from the telecom industry in an ambitious project to enable nationwide wireless communication between cars and roadside facilities with the goal of heading off accidents and alleviating traffic congestion.

The Department of Transportation and officials from DaimlerChrysler and Nissan recently pitched the Vehicle Infrastructure Integration (VII) project to carriers and service providers attending the Telecom '05 conference in Las Vegas. VII is a US$3 billion to $10 billion federally funded effort to build a 220,000-hot-spot network -- supporting IEEE 802.11a and 802.11p -- along interstate and state highway systems.

"We're not in the telecommunications business, so we need help," says Bill Jones, technical director of the Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) in the Department of Transportation. "This is our first foray to really try and open up the dialogue between our two industries."

"We need [the telecom industry] to be a part of this," adds Chris Wilson, vice president of ITS strategy and programs at DaimlerChrysler.

VII is a 984-foot dedicated short-range communications (DSRC) network using 75 MHz of spectrum in the 5.85- to 5.925-GHz band. Auto manufacturers would install DSRC and GPS antennas, receivers and transceivers in all new vehicles, while the Department of Transportation would install the communications links on the roadside.

Cars could then communicate with each other over short distances to warn of impending congestion, or an accident to avoid, or for state and federal highway administration personnel to share road advisory information with vehicles. The system is intended to reduce the expenses associated with accidents that involve injuries or fatalities, which costs the country $260 billion per year; and with congestion, which costs $100 billion per year, VII officials say.

The DSRC system is not designed for casual conversation, these officials stressed.

"We're not designing this to support non-transportation needs," Wilson says. "It's not subject to the whims of consumers."

Drivers will still use cell phones, WiMAX and Wi-Fi in addition to DSRC, Wilson says. "We will never see a car that only has DSRC," he says.

That's one of the hooks that VII proponents hope will attract the participation of carriers and service providers. The automotive industry could provide access to tens of millions of people who buy new cars every year and to the 230 million cars already on the road. Once one VII radio antenna is installed in their cars, and it works, they may be inclined to purchase others.

"The first radio reduces threshold for getting a second radio in," Wilson says.

There are also opportunities for carriers to provide backhaul services for the DSRC system, as well as in assisting the Department of Transportation with service in sparsely populated rural areas or densely populated metropolitan areas, and in providing long-term maintenance and operations for the nationwide network.


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Jim Duffy Jim Duffy is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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