At the 2019 Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, the technology company Continental and the telecommunications group Vodafone showcased the first results of their innovation partnership and demonstrated how new communication technologies can prevent thousands of accidents every year. Last summer, the partners announced that they would be working together to increase road safety. The first results confirm this – state-of-the-art communications technologies such as 5G, cellular vehicle-to-everything (C-V2X) and mobile edge computing help to better protect all road users. The 5G-ready tests are taking place under real-life conditions at Vodafone’s 5G Mobility Lab in Aldenhoven, Germany. A start of series production based on these technologies is planned for the beginning of the 2020s.

Even though the number of traffic fatalities has been falling for years as a result of ever better safety and assistance systems, the number of road accidents is rising. Vulnerable road users are particularly affected. For example, about a quarter of traffic fatalities recorded by the German Federal Statistical Office in 2017 were cyclists and pedestrians. Thereof, more than 30 cyclists died in the same year solely because turning trucks or buses crossed their paths.

“We are working strenuously every day to reduce the potential risks for vulnerable road users,” says Johann Hiebl, head of the Continental Body & Security and Infotainment & Connectivity business units. “To this end, we are ensuring the best possible connectivity of vehicles with each other and with their environment. Communication technologies, such as 5G, C-V2X and mobile edge computing, allow a large number of road users to communicate with each other at the same time, bringing us much closer to our goal. Together with Vodafone, we can bring about a revolution in road safety.”

“Our vision of a world without traffic fatalities, without accidents and without traffic jams is increasingly becoming reality. Following successful tests with our partner Continental, there could be cars on our streets that offer all road users more safety from as early as the beginning of the 2020s. Cars will become smartphones on wheels, with sensors and cameras that communicate in real time via mobile communications, warn of dangers and protect us,” says Hannes Ametsreiter, CEO of Vodafone Germany.

Click here to read the full article.

Source and photo credits: Continental