Edmonton Journal

The buzz on campus

- Moira Wyton

Bees swarm around urban beekeeper Troy Donovan, left, and MacEwan University assistant beekeeper Liam Wilson on the roof of the university’s Building 5 Thursday as they unwrap MacEwan’s six beehives for the season.

Beaumont became the first city in Canada to integrate a driverless shuttle into mixed traffic and pedestrian­s Thursday.

The electronic autonomous shuttle, ELA, runs north-south for one kilometre along 50 Street in Beaumont next to vehicle and pedestrian traffic. Beaumont contribute­d $200,000 to the sixmonth pilot project, in partnershi­p with Pacific Western Transporta­tion (PWT).

“The future is coming and it’s here in Beaumont,” said Mayor John Stewart outside Beaumont City Hall on Thursday.

ELA has a maximum speed of 40 km/h and uses three-dimensiona­l mapping technology to collect data and navigate its surroundin­gs. Unlike the cars it drives alongside, ELA doesn’t have a steering wheel or a brake pedal.

Other pilots in closed pathways have been conducted in Calgary and Edmonton. A major goal of the pilot is to understand how people interact with autonomous technology like ELA.

“How do you interact with something (when) you don’t know how it works?” said Dan Finley, vice-president of business developmen­t at PWT.

Kristen Jervis-Cacka and her daughters, Viola, 8, and Alexa, 4, were among the first to ride the shuttle down a portion of the route. ELA is fully accessible and a PWT representa­tive was on board at all times to ensure the rides ran smoothly.

“I can see its future use if it went all the way through town, but right now it’s fun. It goes faster than I thought it was actually going to go,” said Kristen, whose daughters enjoyed pushing the “doorsclose­d” button to initiate the ride.

Eleanor Mohammed, general manager of integrated growth and infrastruc­ture at the City of Beaumont, hopes that people of all walks of life will be able to use the shuttle.

“The point of the pilot is making sure we’re looking at how the autonomous technology interacts with the community, but also how you take these autonomous vehicles and incorporat­e them into mixed traffic,” said Mohammed.

There is currently no mention of autonomous vehicles in the Alberta Traffic Safety Act, a gap Mohammed hopes the pilot will help address as it gathers new informatio­n.

“We need to learn how this technology interacts on our streets and how we can run it safely,” said Mohammed.

According to Finley, ELA is safer than human-driven cars because “it doesn’t know how to take a risk.”

The free pilot shuttle runs in Beaumont until the end of October.

 ?? Ian Kucerak ??
Ian Kucerak
 ?? Ed Kaiser ?? The City of Beaumont unveiled its ELA, short for Electric Autonomous, on Thursday. This will be Canada’s first pilot of an autonomous shuttle in mixed-traffic use.
Ed Kaiser The City of Beaumont unveiled its ELA, short for Electric Autonomous, on Thursday. This will be Canada’s first pilot of an autonomous shuttle in mixed-traffic use.

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