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Canadian ATLANTIC Project. A Partnership to advance ITS research in Canada in concert with international partners Presentation to Planning Workshop Montreal, Quebec, Canada March 6, 2002. Canadian Objectives.
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Canadian ATLANTIC Project A Partnership to advance ITS research in Canada in concert with international partners Presentation to Planning Workshop Montreal, Quebec, Canada March 6, 2002
Canadian Objectives • The Canadian ATLANTIC Project will participate in ATLANTIC with European and U.S. partners:- benchmark the results of ITS research from the three regions categorized into 8 working groups • The Canadian ATLANTIC Project will have the additional aim to stimulate an active and self-sustaining ITS R&D community in Canada - this will be fostered through: • an assessment of ITS R&D in Canada, • a workshop convened in Canada to discuss results and identify future ITS R&D needs and priorities • submissions to funding agencies
Phased Approach Phase 1: • Commitment to create an ATLANTIC node in Canada Nov 2000 Phase 2: • Prepare proposal for Canadian ATLANTIC Project and present it to potential funding partners Sept 2001 • Recruit experts for Canadian ATLANTIC Project and coordinate with international partners On-going Phase 3: • Implement the Canadian ATLANTIC Project Will be launched officially when funding is confirmed
Deliverables – Phase 3 • An active network of ITS research and development experts in Canada • A workshop to showcase Canadian and international ITS research results convened in Canada • A report of Canadian ITS research accomplishments benchmarked against European and U.S. experience • Submissions to R&D funding agencies for future cooperative ITS research projects
Accomplishments to Date • The Proposal for the Canadian ATLANTIC Project was:- completed in September 2001- presented to key decision makers - submitted to potential funding partners • Recruitment of leaders/rapporteurs/experts for Canadian “mirror” working groups has begun • Initial work is to identify priority issues for Canada – planning workshop in March 2002
Planning Workshop Objectives • Introduce team members to the project, to each other and to international partners • Confirm participants in their roles • Familiarize participants with related ITS initiatives in Canada • Develop specific objectives and work plans for the Canadian “mirror” working groups
Annex ACanadian ATLANTIC Participants (as of March 6, 2002) • Core Team: Abdulhai, Crainic, Johnson • Sponsor: Transport Canada (Policy Group) • Academic sector: Universities of Toronto, Montreal, British Columbia, Calgary, Saskatchewan, Carleton • Private sector: PSR Group, EIS, IRD, IBI Group, Delcan, INRO, Harmelink Consulting, Sabounghi & Assoc. • Public sector: Transport Canada (Safety & Security & Transportation Development Centre), MTO, MTQ(discussions underway with other public & private agencies)
Annex BCanadian ITS Research Priorities and Mirror Group Leaders/Rapporteurs/Experts (incomplete) • Network Monitoring & Traffic Management & ControlProf Abdulhai, M. Mahut, and experts • Intermodal Freight Info, Pre-clearance & LogisticsProf Crainic, W. Johnson and experts • Telematics-based Traffic & Travel InformationTBD, PSR Group and experts • Electronic Road User Charging & Payment IntegrationMuhammad Mustafa and experts • Intermodal Collective Transport InformationProf. Shalaby and experts
Annex BCanadian ITS Research Priorities and Mirror Group Leaders/Rapporteurs/Experts (incomplete) • ITS User Acceptance & Impact AssessmentProf. Miller, Prof. MacIver and experts • Intelligent Vehicles & Vehicle Highway-SystemsTBD and experts • Human Machine Interface & User Friendly ITSTBD and experts
Annex CBackground • Initial approach was made by European Commission to Transport Canada under the Canada-E.U. Science & Technology Agreement – Canada was requested to participate in the E.U.’s transport thematic networks • European research partnerships followed up by seeking partners in Canada to participate in their submissions under the Fifth Framework for Research • The ATLANTIC European partners established a trans-Atlantic partnership with the two Canadian Universities of Toronto and Montreal • Transport Canada has consistently supported this partnership approach to cooperative research
Annex DCanadian ATLANTIC Project Contacts Baher Abdulhai, Director ITS Centre and Testbed University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Tel.: 416 946-5036E-mail: baher@ecf.utoronto.ca Theodor Crainic, Director Intelligent Transportation System Laboratory Centre for Research on Transportation Université de Montréal, Montréal (Québec), Canada Tel: 514 343-7143E-mail: theo@crt.umontreal.ca William Johnson, Consultant Transport Research, Education & Development Services Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Tel: 613 797-1489E-mail: johnswf@attglobal.net