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Oliver carsten institute of transport studies leeds univ

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Institute for Transport Studies Lower speeds and Intelligent Speed Adaptation: what do they deliver for safety and CO 2 ? Oliver Carsten Institute for Transport Studies University of Leeds
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Page 1: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Institute for Transport Studies

Lower speeds and Intelligent Speed Adaptation: what do they deliver for safety and CO2

?

Oliver CarstenInstitute for Transport StudiesUniversity of Leeds

Page 2: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

ISA-UK (2000-2006) CfIT ISA (2007-2008)

The evidence base: two projects

Page 3: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Terminology

Advisory ISA: Informs the driver of the speed limit and warns the driver when the limit is being exceeded (= enhanced SatNav)

Voluntary (or Overridable) ISA: The information on speed limit is linked to the vehicle’s engine management system and perhaps additionally to the braking system —

the system comes on with the vehicle

ignition, but it may be overridden by the driver at will

Mandatory ISA: Works like Voluntary ISA, but without the option to override

Page 4: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Our vehicles

Voluntary system that limited speed to the prevailing limit (no acceleration beyond limit)

Drivers could override at will

Vibration on throttle pedal to prevent over-

throttling

30 30

Page 5: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Some of our fleet in the ISA-UK project

Page 6: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Field trial timings

0 12 24 36

Trial 4

Trial 3

Trial 2

Trial 1

2004 2005 2006

Page 7: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

The ISA field trials database

Driving by 79 drivers over 6 months–

1 month without ISA (baseline)

4 months with Voluntary ISA

1 month with ISA again off

Total mileage: 429,487

With speed limit information: 354,592

For ISA active phase:

218,790

All at 10Hz

Page 8: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Speed profile by time on 30 mph roads

0%

2%

4%

6%

8%

10%

12%

14%

16%

18%

20%

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Prop

ortio

n of

jour

ney

Vehicle speed (mph)

Mandatory

Voluntary

Baseline

Mandatory

Voluntary

Baseline

Page 9: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Safety

Page 10: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Accident prediction and cost-benefit analysis (latest version)

“Recipe”:•

Predict traffic growth (DfT advice)

Predict accident trends without ISA•

Predict additional safety impact of ISA (via observed change in speed patterns)–

Depends on ISA type and road type

Analyse costs and benefits over 60 years from 2010

Scenario-based approach

Page 11: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Method for estimating accident reductions with ISA

Based on models from the literature of relationships between speed and crash risk (e.g. Kloeden et al., 2001, 2002)

These models have been calculated from real-world data

They are not drawn from the police reported contributory factors for accidents

Page 12: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Use of data from ISA field trials to provide speed profiles

Baseline: data collected from Phase 1 (i.e. no ISA)

Voluntary ISA: data collected from Phase 2 (i.e. the ISA system was overridable)

“Mandatory” ISA: data collected from Phase 2 excluding when ISA was overridden

Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3

Without With Without 1 month 4 months 1 month

Page 13: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Estimated impact of Advisory ISA on speed

Obtained from:Shift from Baseline (no ISA) to Voluntary ISA

x Adjustment factor from LAVIA trial in France, i.e.

LAVIA Advisory speed reduction

——————————————— LAVIA Voluntary speed reduction

Page 14: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Predicted risk reduction by type of ISA

Reduction in Injury Accidents with ISA

ISA Variant Overall Reduction

Advisory ISA −2.7%

Voluntary (Overridable) ISA −12.0%

Mandatory (Non-Overridable) ISA −28.9%

Page 15: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Emissions

Page 16: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Emissions modelling using recorded speeds from ISA-UK trials

Done two ways:

1.With detailed second-by-second GAMs models

2.With more aggregated speed-emissions curves

Page 17: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Input into GAMs

 

speed (km/h)

acce

lera

tion

(km

/h/s

)

-10

-5

0

5

10

0 50 100 150

Baseline Driving

0 50 100 150

Driving with ISA Engaged Counts

1248173468137276557

1124227045839252186773770676121

Driving on 70 mph roads

Page 18: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

GAMs modelling

Speed Limit (mph)

Change with Voluntary ISA

Change with Mandatory

ISA20 0.0% +0.1%

30 −0.4% −0.4%

40 −1.2% −1.2%

60 +0.3% +0.3%

70 −3.4 % −5.8%

Speed-emissions curves

Speed Limit (mph)

Change with Mandatory

ISA30 +2.8%

40 +2.8%

60 +0.4%

70 −4.2%

CO2

emissions from UK field trial speed profiles

Page 19: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Network micro-simulation modelling

4 networks:

1.

Rural –

A614

2.

Urban –

Sheffield S10

3.

Urban –

Sheffield Sheaf Valley

4.

Motorway –

A1(M) near Gateshead

AIMSUN micro-simulation model modified to cater for Voluntary ISA

For emissions, used speed-emissions curves

Page 20: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Critical mass effect?

 Urban – All vehicles Urban – Cars Urban – HGVs

0

5

10

15

20

25

0 20 40 60 80 100

% Spe

eding

0

5

10

15

20

25

0 20 40 60 80 100

% Spe

eding

 

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

0 20 40 60 80 100

% Spe

eding

Rural – All vehicles Rural – Cars Rural – HGVs

0

1

2

3

4

0 20 40 60 80 100

% Spe

eding

0

1

2

3

4

5

0 20 40 60 80 100

% Spe

eding

 

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

0 20 40 60 80 100

% Spe

eding

Motorway – All vehicles Motorway – Cars Motorway – HGVs

0

2

4

6

8

10

0 20 40 60 80 100

% Spe

eding

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

0 20 40 60 80 100

% Spe

eding

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

0 20 40 60 80 100

% Spe

eding

Page 21: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

The future(s)

Page 22: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Predicted ISA penetration under the Market Driven scenario

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060 2070

Prop

ortion

 of ISA system

s in veh

fleet

Voluntary

Advisory

Non‐ISA

Page 23: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Predicted ISA penetration under the Authority Driven scenario

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060 2070

Prop

ortion

 of ISA systesm

 in veh

 flee

t

Mandatory

Voluntary

Advisory

Non‐ISA

Page 24: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Crash reduction over time for Market Driven ISA

 

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1

2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060 2070

Acciden

t redu

ction rate

Fatal

Serious

Slight

Page 25: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Crash reduction over time for Authority Driven ISA

 

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1

2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060 2070

Acciden

t redu

ction rate

Fatal

Serious

Slight

Page 26: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Predicted safety outcomes

Slight Crashes Serious Crashes Fatal CrashesMarket Driven 4% 8% 13%Authority Driven 15% 25% 30%

Crashes Saved 2010 to 2070

Page 27: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Predicted environmental outcomes

CO2 (tonnes x 106)

Fuel (litres x 106)

Market Driven 4.139 6,460Authority Driven 16.303 25.436

Savings in emissions and fuel 2010 to 2070

Page 28: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Source of ISA benefits over 60-year period

Implementation Scenario

ISA Benefits (£1m) % Due to Accident SavingsFuel CO2 Accidents TOTAL

Market Driven £446 £196 £32,808 £33,450 98%

Authority Driven £1,740 £773 £85,122 £87,636 97%

Page 29: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Do the benefits outweigh the costs?

Benefit to cost ratios (accidents + fuel + CO2

):

Market Driven scenario 3.4

Authority Driven scenario

7.4

Page 30: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Conclusions

The safety benefits of ISA are very considerable

The harder the push for ISA and the “stronger”

the system, the greater the benefits

The environmental benefits of ISA are real–

There may be benefits on roads other than 70 mph roads

In cost-benefit terms the environmental impact is much less than the safety impact

Much of the potential of ISA, e.g. to replace traditional and costly traffic calming, was not counted

Page 31: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

Thank you for your attention!

[email protected]

Page 32: Oliver carsten   institute of transport studies leeds univ

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