Transport research must focus on the challenges of the future, such as keeping people and products mobile, improving road safety and energy efficiency, and making the sector more competitive. This is the clear message of the European Road Transport Research Advisory Council (ERTRAC) which will tomorrow unveil its Strategic Research Agenda for the sector. ERTRAC brings together all players of the sector - automotive industry, road infrastructures, local and national governments, NGOs, universities and research centres from across Europe. By defining common goals and deliverables for transport research, ERTRAC’s joint Strategic Research Agenda should maximise the impact of public and private investment, and ensure that research is fully geared towards the needs of the sector.
Commissioner for Science and Research Janez Potoènik stated: “We all want cars that are greener and cheaper to run. We all want to feel safer on our roads. By focusing on the research needs of the road transport sector as a whole, ERTRAC is bringing those goals a lot closer.”
Road transport is the backbone of the European economy, with 11% of total GDP. It is a major source of employment – and a highly research intensive sector. Within EU companies there is more investment in road transport research and development than in any other sector (24% of investment in the top 500 EU companies in 2003).
The ERTRAC Strategic Research Agenda will stress the fundamental role of research in meeting the transport challenges of the future. It analyses present and future trends, outlines ways to maximize research resources, and increase the impact of public and private research investments. It sets out detailed targets and roadmaps for research in the sector over the next twenty years. Research in the road transport sector supports EU policies such as the halving of road deaths by 2010. It encompasses expertise in technologies ranging from information technology to material science.
The four priority themes identified by ERTRAC for future research are:
Patrick Vittet-Philippe | Source: alphagalileo
Further information: europa.eu.int/comm/research/transport/index_en.html
www.ertrac.org
More articles from
Ecology, The Environment and Conservation:
Turf Wars: Sand and Corals Don't Mix
10.10.2008 | ARC Centre of Excellence in Coral Reef Studies
A tool to assess the risk of desertification
10.10.2008 | Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Scientists find new insight into genome of neglected malaria parasite
10.10.2008 | Life Sciences
Hodgkin lymphoma -- new characteristics discovered
10.10.2008 | Life Sciences
Digital zebrafish embryo provides the first complete developmental blueprint of a vertebrate
10.10.2008 | Life Sciences