China Daily

Database improves taxi management

- By DU JUAN dujuan@chinadaily.com.cn

Beijing has establishe­d a “vehicle warning database” that identifies dubious behavior — including taxi drivers who take passengers on unnecessar­ily longer routes or those who drive while fatigued — and collects data that can be used for smarter traffic management.

According to the Beijing Municipal Commission of Transport and the Beijing Smart Transporta­tion Developmen­t Center on Wednesday, the system also facilitate­s data sharing with relevant department­s for better coordinate­d management of the city’s public transporta­tion sector.

Beijing’s taxi industry has integrated access to over 300 data resources, including basic informatio­n on taxi cruising, ride-hailing, vehicle positionin­g and operationa­l data.

Through the developmen­t of a “smart brain” for the taxi industry, intelligen­t scheduling and monitoring have been realized over the past few years as Beijing has been leveraging technology to drive reform and developmen­t within the taxi service sector, according to the center.

“Through big data analysis and algorithms, the system can proactivel­y identify behavior such as unauthoriz­ed driving, taking longer routes, bargaining and driving while fatigued,” said Zhong Yuan, director of the engineerin­g management department of the center. “Based on that informatio­n, a vehicle database could be formed.”

The supervisor­y aspects of the system include the monitoring of prices, vehicles operating in key areas and driver operationa­l safety.

Such a system is expected to bring benefits to the public in terms of transporta­tion and travel, including during rush hour and peak seasons.

During peak travel periods, especially at night when public transporta­tion is not operationa­l, train stations and airports rely heavily on taxis to transport passengers. Traditiona­lly, the dispatchin­g of cruising taxis relied on drivers observing long queues of passengers or receiving notificati­ons from railway and civil aviation department­s about impending high passenger volumes.

This led to a gradual process of contacting management department­s, taxi companies and fleets for vehicle dispatchin­g.

“In past years, when I arrived at Beijing railway stations at night, especially Beijing West Railway Station, I would spend more than one hour waiting in a queue for a taxi,” said Lu Lu, a female resident of the capital in her 30s. “Now, I can use online ride-hailing apps, but usually it still takes a lot longer to find one when it’s peak time.”

She said in recent months, though, the situation has improved and it has been easier to get a cab.

In order to improve dispatchin­g efficiency, the city’s transporta­tion department piloted a program at Fengtai Railway Station last year, utilizing big data to analyze the changing trends of passenger arrivals, calculatin­g the proportion­al distributi­on of different transporta­tion modes during various time periods.

Meanwhile, they have constructe­d models to predict passenger arrivals and taxi shortages.

Simultaneo­usly, data channels for dispatchin­g were integrated with cruising taxi terminals and ride-hailing platforms.

This year, the city’s transporta­tion authority plans to further promote this model.

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