ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

71
ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack

Transcript of ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

Page 1: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations

CEE 582 Ed McCormack

Page 2: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

2

What is ITS CVO?

Partnership of the public and private sectors focused on developing ways to

improve freight movement

NationallyInternationallyIntermodally

With emphasis on technology, systems integration and trucks

Page 3: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

3

Vision: Safe and Efficient Shipping Operations

Electronic TagMobile Comm

Safety Equipment

InternationalBorder ElectronicClearance

ElectronicClearance

AutomatedFleet & FreightAdministration

AutomatedInspections

On-board ComputerOn-board Monitors

On-board Navigation

“Paperless” Vehicle

SeamlessIntermodalOperations

WIM

HAZMAT

Page 4: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

4

CVO (i.e. Trucks) in Perspective

Nationally 7.8 million commercial trucks, driven 2 billion miles and which carry 75% all the nation’s freight (in value)

Page 5: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

5

ITS CVO Programs Involve Many Players

• State Agencies

• Carriers

• Technology & Service Providers

• Professional & Trade Associations

• Federal Highway Administration (FHWA)

• Border Enforcement Agencies

• Canada/Mexico

Page 6: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

6

CVO - Interstate Trucking

• Commercial trucking operates across state lines

• Each state has its own laws and taxes– Within federal limitations on interstate

commerce

Page 7: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

7

State Regulations

• Vehicle size and weight limits• Fuel tax• Vehicle registration• Weight distance taxes• Operating authority (proof of

insurance, business competition)• Temporary versus annual permits• Safety – vehicle inspections

Page 8: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

8

Different states – different laws

Page 9: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

9

Trucks do not Operate Like Cars

• To enter Washington a trucker needs– Vehicle licensing, permits. – Fuel license (IFTA). – Single state registration

• Have to stop at ports of entry, weigh stations, and for roadside inspections

• Are inspected for mechanical safety at terminal

• Their books can be audited

Page 10: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

10

Truck Weights

• Truckers want to fill trucks because they make more per load but all states regulate weight because but overweight trucks:– Damage pavement– Have problems with bridges– Need greater turning radii– Have safety and public perceptions concerns

Page 11: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

11

Regulation Requires Enforcement

• Each trucking firm has to file taxes in each state in which it operates

• Paperwork is enormous

• Enforcement is expensive for both trucking firms and states

Page 12: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

12

Results of Enforcement

• Taxes owed depend on the mileage driven in each state

• Firms must track all mileage

Page 13: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

13

Enforcement

• At weigh stations• At roadside stops

• By audit

• By inspection at the maintenance facility

Page 14: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

14

Clearinghouses Make it Easier

• IRP – International Registration Plan

• IFTA– International Fuel Tax Agreement

• CVSA– Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance– Motor Carrier Safety Assurance Program

Page 15: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

15

ITS

• ITS is designed to make it still easier

• Use electronics and databases to – Make administration / enforcement of

laws easier– Reduce paperwork handling costs /

duplication– Allow concentration of enforcement effort

on “bad” trucks

Page 16: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

16

CVISN

• Commercial Vehicles Information System Network

• Part of national program to encourage use of ITS to improve performance of CVO

• Washington is a leading state

Page 17: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

17

What is CVISN?

• CVISN is a collection of information systems and communications networks

• CVISN provides a integration framework that enables the government, motor carriers, and others engaged in CVO to exchange information and conduct business transactions electronically

Page 18: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

18

Vision: Electronic Business Transactions

CVISN CoreInfrastructure

Carrier Base State

Shipper, Bank, Insurer,Lessor, Service Bureau

StandardElectronic

Data Interchange(EDI)

Transactions

Credentials, Taxes, Safety Records,

HAZMAT, Insurance,Shipments,Payments

Interstate Transactions

Canada

Mexico

WIRELINE Wide Area Communications

Page 19: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

19

CVISN

Benefits of CVISN Deployment– Safety (top priority) – Cost Savings (second priority)– Customer Satisfaction– Other Indirect Benefits – Mobility,

Environment

• Predominate use is at weigh stations

Page 20: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

20

Traditional Commercial Vehicle Enforcement Sites

Open Sign

OPEN/CLOSEDSIGN

TO STATIC SCALE AND INSPECTION

STATION

MAINLINE

Page 21: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

21

Traditional Enforcement

• More trucks arrive than scales can process quickly

– Shut off scales (miss illegals at the back of convoys)

– Back trucks onto freeway (safety hazard)

– Turn “open” sign on & off (random results)

Page 22: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

22

Page 23: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

23

Modern Scale System (1)

• Automatic Vehicle Identification (AVI) tag attached to truck

• Tag relates to database– Registration tax status

• Including allowable weights– Fuel tax status– Last safety inspection– Company safety record– Permits

Page 24: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

24

Modern Scale System (2)

• Truck runs over scale (weigh in motion)

• Truck AVI tag is read

• Look up table compares database information to weights

• Decision is made to bring in / pass the truck

Page 25: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

25

Commercial Vehicles Systems: Weigh-in-Motion

SENSORS AND ELECTRONICS

OPEN/CLOSEDSIGN

AVI NOTIFICATION

STATION

TO STATIC SCALE AND INSPECTION

STATION

PRECLEARED TRUCKS CONTINUE ON MAINLINE

AVI NOTIFICATIONSTATION

TRACKINGSENSORS

WIM Scales

Page 26: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

26

AVI Tag Used in Washington

• Transponder at 916 MHz tag• Cost $50 in Washington State• 5 year battery life• Red or green

light with a beep• Active tag (as opposed

to passive)• Dedicated Short Range

Communications devices(DSRC)

Page 27: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

27

Page 28: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

28

Page 29: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

29

Page 30: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

30

WIM Scale Technology• Types of scales

– Bending plate– Deep pit load cell– Piezo cable– Capacitance mat /strip– Piezo quartz– Fiber optics– Bridge WIM– Culvert WIM (CULWAY)– Buried steel frame / strain system

Page 31: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

31

WIM

• All WIM scales suffer from the same limitations – dynamics (bouncing wheels)

• Different designs do have advantages / disadvantages based on– Cost – Accuracy– Expected lifespan

Page 32: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

32

WIM

• Consequently:

• WIM can NOT be used directly for enforcement.

• It can only be used to sort probable over-weights from not likely over weights

Page 33: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

33

WIM

• The key is reducing vehicle dynamics

• Next best alternative – account for dynamics with multiple sensors – longer time on the scale

Page 34: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

34

WIM Scales

• Ramp sorter

• Main line sorter

Page 35: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

35

ScaleHouse

WIMScale By-pass Lane

Enforcement

Ramp Sorter Scale

DirectionalSign

Page 36: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

36

Ramp Scales

• Slower speed = more time on scale = better accuracy

• Scales can be repaired and maintained more easily

Page 37: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

37

Ramp Scales

• Extra ramps (by-pass lanes) require land and paving = expensive

• Requires even “good” trucks to slow down and enter scale site

Page 38: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

38

Mainline Sorter Scale

ScaleHouse

WIMScale

AVI Readers

DirectionalSign

Page 39: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

39

Main Line Scales

• Do not need to slow down trucks• Less disruption to trucking /

roadway• Can reduce size of weight station

ramps (lower cost)• Easier to retrofit existing scale

sites

Page 40: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

40

Main Line Scales

• Increased risk of “evasion” through by-pass– Intentional– Unintentional

• More difficult to install and maintain• Subject to greater level of dynamic

impacts• Harder to communicate with drivers• Officers can’t examine passing trucks

Page 41: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

41

WIM In Washington

Cle ElumPOE

SpokanePOE

StanwoodBryant

Bow HillPOE

Federal Way

Nisqually

Kelso

RidgefieldPOE

PlymouthPOE

FederalWay

Everett

Cle Elum

I82

Deployed

2001-2003

2003-2005

Page 42: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

42

CVISN Status

Page 43: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

43

Interstate CVO

• Advantages:– Screening increases the effectiveness of

officers– Decreases the time delay on legal

truckers– Decreases emissions and noise– Improves fuel usage– Lowers merging / diverging movements– Allows more thorough credentials check

Page 44: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

44

Interstate CVO• Disadvantages

– Costly infrastructure– Timing of database updates is difficult– Notification is difficult– WIM is expensive and requires lots of

maintenance– Needs large numbers of participants to

really gain operational benefits– Little incentive for many truckers to

participate

Page 45: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

45

Interstate CVO

• Disadvantages– Officers can’t do visual inspections of

“passed” trucks• Implementation issue• Lowering of standards?• Won’t detect “problems” with “good”

firms until it is too late• Can’t see the condition of the driver• Drivers don’t have the excuse to stop and

take a break

Page 46: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

46

Interstate CVO

• Implementation Issues– Agency interaction – Database ownership and control

• (effected by …)

– Who benefits?– Who pays?– Privacy (see control of database)– Interoperability

Page 47: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

47

CVISN Benefits

• American Trucking Association– Cost Benefit analysis (before and after CVISN)

resulted in a 16 to 1 return on investment to the motor carrier

• Washington State– IT Feasibility Study and Cost Benefit Analysis found

for every dollar spent on CVISN, the citizens received $1.28 in return benefits

Page 48: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

48

AVI Tags Functional Issues

• One way or two way?– How do you signal the trucker?

• In vehicle tag?• Overhead sign?• Roadside VMS?• Some combination?

• Do you store credentials electronically on the tag?

Page 49: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

49

AVI Tag

• How do you connect the tag ID to the various database records?– Modify each existing database?– Creation of new database?– Who’s credentials are you using (this

trip)?• Independent trucker working for major

carrier

– Can the legacy database be changed?

Page 50: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

50

AVI Tag Readers

• Operational speed – Speed of vehicle– Speed of transaction

• Connection to databases• Connection to WIM device• Need to track truck from one

location to another

Page 51: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

51

Database Integration / Architecture

• Does the roadside reader connect to the DOL database directly?

• Does the DOL database download the necessary data to the enforcement site?– What about when the “home” IRP state is

not the state with the enforcement location?

• Are there security concerns with making the DOL data accessible?

Page 52: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

52

Agency Integration

• Up to ten state agencies per state must cooperate

• Agency buy-in and support is essential

• A very difficult task if this is not a priority within the organization

• Trust – often doesn’t exist– Regulatory agency Vs. firms Vs. drivers

Page 53: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

53

Database

• Who owns the data from each enforcement site?– State?– Trucking company?– Private contractor?– How can that data be used?

• Audit?• Speed enforcement?• By the trucking company?

Page 54: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

54

Who Benefits? Who Pays?

• Are the benefits of the system mostly obtained by – the public sector, or – the private sector?

• Who should pay for the infrastructure and operations costs?

Page 55: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

55

Who Benefits?

• The benefits in congested / high volume locations are different than in low volume areas

– California– Wyoming

Page 56: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

56

Who Pays?

• Is system for the public agency benefit or the trucker’s benefit?

• Is the system mandatory or voluntary?– Payment issue

• A requirement?• Is it intended to be a private business?

– Participation issue• Need incentives to get participation?

Page 57: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

57

Groups in the WIM Business

Greenlight: Oregon

Page 58: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

58

Prepass

• Private business – Has public partners

• Installs and operates system for states– $0.99 a bypass or $15 a month fee for

unlimited bypasses– Owns / controls the data– Does not allow us of their transponders in

other systems

• 250,000 trucks enrolled

Page 59: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

59

NORPASS

• More “public” agency oriented approach

• Truckers buy transponders from states (~$50)

• Free use of the system to truckers • Supported directly by states• Transponder works in Prepass• 56,000 trucks enrolled

Page 60: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

60

Greenlight

• Oregon’s version (works with NORPASS)

• Political disagreements with other states– Mostly over control of and access to data

• 25,000 trucks enrolled

Page 61: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

61

Interoperability

• Will these group’s systems operate seamlessly? (Not so far)

• Technical integration exists (tags)• Back office integration does not

work – Access/control to data– Transaction fees

Page 62: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

62

Privacy

• Who gets access to data?• Who gets to know where the

truck/trucker is?– Independent trucker– Hired driver– Company– Shipper– State regulatory agencies (WSP)

• Effect on participation / political acceptance of system

Page 63: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

63

Interoperability

• CVISN tag can be used for tolls

• Same technology, different backroom operations

• However what about other DSRC applications?

• Different frequencies have advantages and problems

Page 64: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

64

Transponder Standards Issues

• CVISN tag is 916 megahertz• Proposed 5.9 gigahertz for DSRC has

better ability to transfer more information at speeds

• Resistance to this change • Can Federal government force a

transponder standard?• Manufacturers driven by existing and

future customers and will not make the tag unless it will pay

• Europe has a different standard

Page 65: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

65

Truck Warning (CVISN Tag)

Page 66: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

66

Other CVO ITS

Page 67: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

67

Commercial Fleet Management Increasingly

Common • GPS with cellular connection • On-board computers with sensors on

brakes, lights, tires, etcused for

• Equipment and load tracking • Dispatching and en-route information• Driver management• Maintenance• Emergency call signal • Fuel tax reporting (?)

Page 68: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

68

Global Positioning System

• System uses 24 satellites

• Signal from 4 satellites are used to compute positions in three dimensions (plus 1 for a time check

• Ground based master control system keeps system correct

Page 69: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

69

GPS uses triangulation to find location

Source: Geoplane

Page 70: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

70

ITS and Hazardous Materials

• GPS used for shipment tracking and monitoring

• Electronic placard/manifest - if incident occurs responders know what materials they have to deal with

• Travel information for re-routing during incidents

• Stolen vehicle alerts, geo-fencing, remote vehicle disabling

Page 71: ITS and Commercial Vehicle Operations CEE 582 Ed McCormack.

71

Summary – Trucks and ITS• Electronic clearance

– Vehicle weigh, status, and cargo

• Automated roadside safety inspection– Sensor differentiate between vehicles and look at safety data

• Onboard safety monitoring systems– Provide information about load balance, doors, temperature

tire pressure, crash avoidance

• Automated administrative processes– Improve government taxation and regulation process

• Commercial Fleet Management– Real time route, driver, vehicle, and cargo information

• Hazardous materials incident response– Tracking, information about cargo contents