CONGESTION
Using green logistics in the battle against congestion
Photo: Amazon
Improving the mobility of goods as well as people is an important step in reducing congestion and vehicle emissions. By Jonathan Andrews
Amazon hopes to use its Prime Air drones to deliver packages for the final leg of the journey–the so called ‘last mile’
T
he film Back to the Future II, shot in the late 1980s but set in the year 2015, may not have accurately depicted all the technological developments of the present day (hover boards anyone?) yet, in some areas, it predicted technology that is now commonplace. Video conferencing, eerily similar to Skype, is shown, as are special drones for walking dogs or policing. While today’s drones may not yet be acting as policemen or walking our dogs, global online shopping and distribution company, Amazon, is working towards using them to deliver packages to customer’s doorsteps thus removing many delivery trucks from city streets.
26
• May 2015
The company is in talks with the US Federal Aviation Authority to gain approval for their Prime Air drones, which would deliver packages for the final leg of the journey (the so called ‘last mile’). A statement from Amazon reads: “One day, Prime Air will be as normal as seeing mail trucks on the road today.” But while it could still be some time before packages of up to 2.5 kilogrammes, are buzzing around at 80km/h across city skies, cities are increasingly focusing their attention on logistics as another way to reduce costs, inefficiencies, congestion and pollution. “A vast amount of technologies are already available today to manage
different aspects of the movement of goods,” says Lina Konstantinopoulou, Project Coordinator from ERTICO, a European based partnership of 100 companies and institutions involved in the production of Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS). “However, these existing systems are currently not linked to each other, and thus we are missing the opportunity to optimise performance of their cooperation and leaving a large gap for improving goods management.” ERTICO is heading up the first European project fully dedicated to the deployment of cooperative ITS applied to logistics. Called CO-GISTICS, the project, funded by the European Commission, www.cities-today.com