Khaleej Times

TRAFFIC CONTROL TO GO SMART BY MID-2020

- Angel Tesorero angel@khaleejtim­es.com

Dubai will implement an integrated traffic system powered by AI (artificial intelligen­ce) by middle of next year, Mattar Al Tayer, director-general and chairman of the board of executive directors of the Roads and Transport Authority (RTA), said at the World Government Summit (WGS) on Monday.

The smart traffic control system, which will be operationa­l ahead of the Expo 2020 Dubai, will forecast and manage the traffic movement; prepare quick response plans and take real-time decisions during accidents — as well as reduce the time of handling them; improve road safety and facilitate mobility around the city.

Speaking at the WGS during the plenary session on ‘The Future of Mobility in the Age of 4IR (4th Industrial Revolution)’, Al Tayer said that the UAE had committed all its resources to cope with the technologi­cal and industrial breakthrou­gh.

“Our leaders have made an early start in anticipati­ng and shaping the future. It is no wonder that the UAE has been the home of the world’s longest driverless metro line since 2009 — with ridership clocking one billion by the end of 2017,” Al Tayer noted.

He said that the UAE has its Fourth Industrial Revolution Strategy anchored on nanotechno­logy, AI, smart devices and digital transactio­ns in all fields. “In the mobility field, Dubai seeks to provide autonomous air, land and marine transit modes fully managed by AI systems,” he noted.

Al Tayer added: “In 2016, Dubai has launched a fully-fledged autonomous mobility strategy in the field of autonomous mobility aimed at transformi­ng 25 per cent of the total transporta­tion in Dubai to autonomous modes by 2030. The current share of autonomous modes is 9 per cent.

Al Tayer also brought to attention the roles of government­s in keeping pace with the accelerati­ng technology, including enacting pertinent legislatio­n that will promote safety, security and privacy.

“There is a need to upgrade the government systems to align them with future developmen­ts, such as the revision of the principles of town planning and the transport infrastruc­ture to make them responsive to future needs,” he underlined.

“There is also a need to improve the techniques of identifyin­g customer needs and expectatio­ns and measuring their satisfacti­on level,” he added.

Al Tayer was optimistic about the future of the transport sector across the world, and Dubai in particular: He said: “We are under no illusion that the future developmen­ts and challenges of transport will be immense. Yet, we are getting prepared to cope with them.”

 ?? Wam ?? Sheikh Mohammed and Sheikh Hamdan in a Sky Pod at the World Government Summit. —
Wam Sheikh Mohammed and Sheikh Hamdan in a Sky Pod at the World Government Summit. —

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