Ottawa Citizen

STEERING TOWARD SMART-CITY SOLUTIONS

Tech monitoring roads to help cities enhance repairs and avoid lawsuits

- ZANE SCHWARTZ

Bell is exploring road condition-monitoring technology for cities and insurance companies, The Logic has learned.

The technology uses smartphone­s to measure the speed, location, vibration and weather on roads. Bell describes it as a way for municipali­ties to repair roads more efficientl­y and avoid lawsuits from drivers.

This technology could add to Bell’s growing smart-city business, which offers potential new revenue for the $42-billion telecom as it faces growing pressure from the federal government to cut prices in its lucrative wireless division.

Bell has applied for two patents in the U.S. and Canada, which are “a result of ongoing research into IoT (Internet of Things) applicatio­ns as part of our focus on innovative Smart City solutions,” said company spokespers­on Marc Choma.

“Informatio­n pertaining to road conditions is invaluable,” reads Bell’s patent applicatio­ns, which were filed in December 2018 and made public in June. “Road condition informatio­n is rather limited and requires a human to visually examine the road and identify the condition and any issues thereof,” they say. “The city may not be aware of a road issue until long after the issue has started, leading to inefficien­cies in repairing roads.”

“Insurance companies may also be interested in using road condition informatio­n to adjust insurance rates,” read the applicatio­ns. “For example, a driver that consistent­ly drives on a road that has numerous potholes may be more at risk of sustaining damage to their vehicle than a driver who drives on a road without potholes.”

The telecom has already built up a number of smart city-related business lines. In February, Bell signed a partnershi­p with Markham, Ont., in which the firm promised to create an integrated platform that analyzes water leaks, energy use in city buildings and the locations of city vehicles.

Asked if Bell was in negotiatio­ns with or had secured any partnershi­ps with cities for the technology it’s seeking to patent, Choma would only say it is not under further developmen­t, and has not been “commercial­ly deployed.”

Parts of Bell’s smart-city division cover areas similar to those outlined in the patent applicatio­ns. The telecom has a “fleet management” department, which provides tech solutions for trucking companies using telematics systems, which track metrics like a vehicle’s location, accelerati­on and braking. These new applicatio­ns suggest vehicle telematics would be combined with smartphone-collected data.

However, these patents propose an approach to vehicle monitoring that is significan­tly more ambitious than Bell’s current efforts, leveraging the millions of phones the telecom already has on the market in lieu of municipall­y linked IoT devices on things like trucks and water mains.

“If Bell can convert its phones into another revenue line, that’s a potentiall­y massive market opportunit­y,” said Bilal Farooq, a professor at Ryerson University and Canada Research Chair in Disruptive Technologi­es.

“Some insurance companies are already asking customers to download apps so they can monitor their behaviour in-car,” said Farooq.

“Bell is looking to collect more types of data than most of these apps, so if they can get the tech right, they’ll have more accurate informatio­n and be able to offer more precise services.”

The road condition-monitoring market is getting increasing­ly competitiv­e in Canada. Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto are all partnering with Google subsidiary Waze, sharing data to keep residents up to date on traffic.

Bell’s patent applicatio­ns suggest raw data collected by smartphone­s and telematics could be cross-referenced with informatio­n from third parties such as weather services.

“For example, the road condition server may receive vibration data and location data from mobile device. The vibration data may suggest that the drive along the road is very bumpy, which may be indicative of ... deteriorat­ing road conditions,” they read.

“However, weather data at the location of the mobile device where the road appeared to be bumpy indicate that significan­t snow has fallen, which may be the cause for the apparent deteriorat­ing road conditions.”

The phone data could be put in a server and combined with informatio­n that city workers — including drivers, engineers and maintenanc­e — send in via mobile phone or computer on road conditions they see.

City staff and insurance firms could then be provided access to that informatio­n.

Bell has been looking into other technology-focused businesses recently; in November, The Logic broke the news that the firm was looking into developing wearable technology it claimed would be better than that used by Apple Watch or Fitbit.

For more news about the innovation economy visit www.thelogic.co

 ?? ERNEST DOROSZUK/FILES ?? Bell has applied for two patents in the U.S. and Canada for technology that uses smartphone­s to measure road conditions. It is growing its smart-city business, a source of potential new revenue amid rising pressure from the federal government to cut wireless prices.
ERNEST DOROSZUK/FILES Bell has applied for two patents in the U.S. and Canada for technology that uses smartphone­s to measure road conditions. It is growing its smart-city business, a source of potential new revenue amid rising pressure from the federal government to cut wireless prices.
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