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How smart 5G vehicle communication system will reduce Hong Kong’s fatal road accidents and congestion

  • Smart sensors in vehicles can exchange road safety data with other smart vehicles, pedestrians, cyclists, traffic lights, lamp posts and buildings
  • Hong Kong Applied Science and Technology Research Institute and its partner, HKT, plan first trial of C-V2X technology on public roads in the city 

 

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Over the past few decades, numerous technological innovations have been introduced to make driving easier and safer, including the use of satellite-based Global Positioning System (GPS) navigation services, collision avoidance systems and speeding alerts.

These measures have come as the number of vehicles on roads worldwide has continued to rise – up from estimates of about 670 million in 1996 to 1.32 billion by the end of 2016 – fuelled by surging demand in recent years in China and Asia-Pacific’s developing nations, a 2017 Wards Intelligence report found.

Road traffic problems are increasing in Hong Kong – one of the world’s most densely populated places – which was home to 805,206 licensed motor vehicles last November. Photo: SCMP/Dickson Lee
Road traffic problems are increasing in Hong Kong – one of the world’s most densely populated places – which was home to 805,206 licensed motor vehicles last November. Photo: SCMP/Dickson Lee

This global increase has led to growing traffic problems such as road accidents and congestion, with densely populated Hong Kong – home to about 7.5 million people in an area of 2,755 square km (1,064 square miles) – recording more than 16,000 traffic accidents in 2019, including 113 resulting in fatalities and 1,996 leading to serious injuries, the Transport Department’s latest figures showed.

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The same report said that the number of vehicles on the city’s roads is continuing to rise, with 805,206 licensed vehicles recorded last November – up 1.6 per cent compared with the same month in 2019.

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