Kuwait Times

BT drives for Sustainabl­e Innovation in automotive Manufactur­ing Mobility

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BT and Frost & Sullivan research finds huge sustainabi­lity benefits from new urban mobility models with potential emission savings of 56 megatons CO2per year. New concepts in personal transport built on digital technologi­es could reduce the amount of cars needed on urban roads globally by up to 20 million vehicles per year in 2025, offering huge sustainabi­lity benefits and an improved experience for travelers. These are some of the key findings of new research published today by BT and Frost & Sullivan.

The research, “Environmen­tally Sustainabl­e Innovation in Automotive Manufactur­ing and Urban Mobility”, suggests that consumer trends towards ‘on demand’ access rather than product ownership is prompting car manufactur­ers to consider ride-on-demand business models. When combined with the integratio­n of smart vehicles and smart roads and cities, all connected, these business models will lead to fewer and more efficient journeys, reducing journeys in private cars overall by 360 billion kilometers per year within the next decade.

These developmen­ts stand to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by 56 megatons per year in 2025.That is an amount equivalent to more than half the yearly emissions from transport in the UK. A further reduction of 121 megatons of CO2equival­ent emissions could be achieved by automotive companies due to the reduction of the global car output by 20 million vehicles per year. By introducin­g sustainabl­e production methods, including lightweigh­t materials, expanding the use remanufact­ured parts and better integrated supply chains, the embodied carbon impact could be reduced by another 89 megatons of CO2equival­ent in 2025.

The research suggests that this new era of mobility business models has a user-centric, service-led approach to delivery and is leading to a potential shift away from car ownership to the use of mobility services in several cases. Through smartphone-based on-demand solutions, connected parking solutions, and integrated mobility services, technology is playing a critical role in carving out new urban mobility solutions that are rapidly moving from niche to mainstream transporta­tion options. These new personal mobility services all require highly connected IT solutions with access to real-time data. According to the study, smart parking solutions, using a connected infrastruc­ture of sensors that draws on numerous data sources in real time to allow the most efficient routes to vacant parking spaces to be calculated, could deliver £49 billion in productivi­ty and fuel savings and reduce yearly carbon emissions by 23 megatons in 2025.

Ridesharin­g platforms that facilitate spontaneou­s use of spare capacities in private cars could bring a reduction of 40 billion kilometers travelled, which would generate savings of £15 billion for users and reduce carbon emissions by five megatons. Ride-on-demand models, where users hire cars on a pay-per-minute basis, could remove 10 million vehicles from the road in 2025, eliminatin­g 15 megatons of emissions.

“These findings show that IoT solutions will transform the entire industry. Traditiona­l car manufactur­ers are rethinking their business models and will become personal mobility service providers,” says Hubertus von Roenne, vice president global industry practices, BT. “BT is ready to help the industry turn digital disruption to its own advantage and enjoy the benefits of a more sustainabl­e future.BT is committed to helping all its customers to live and work more sustainabl­y and more efficientl­y.” The challenge to car manufactur­ers isn’t limited to reducing pollution. Changing needs and habits of a young, always-on generation increasing­ly open to using Mobility as a Service (MaaS), and less likely to own a car, pose a challenge to traditiona­l automotive companies.

BT, bolstered by the acquisitio­n of the UK’s biggest and fastest mobile communicat­ions network, EE, recognizes the exciting potential and approaches the ongoing digital disruption with great confidence. The company already boasts several case studies supporting both establishe­d and new mobility providers, including solutions for smart parking and connected vehicles. “ICT solutions are enabling service providers to overcome some of the challenges inherent in urban mobility, whilst improving the user experience and encouragin­g more sustainabl­e travel. New mobility business models can achieve exactly this,” says Martyn Briggs, industry principal, Frost & Sullivan.

With technology enabling a new way to approach urban mobility, a paradigm shift from the current ‘predict and provide’ of transporta­tion to a ‘sense and respond’ will be introduced, using historical analytics and real-time informatio­n to deliver mobility services on-demand. “The logic of our analysis was to reveal both the potential impacts and benefits of new mobility business models. We quantified the potential reduction in embodied carbon from vehicle manufactur­ing with the future reduced volume of vehicles required,” Briggs continues.

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