Tuesday 23 June 2015
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Sweden to test electrified roads in a real-life environment

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Two solutions for electrified roads are going to be tested in Sweden, with test tracks being set up near Arlanda and outside of Gävle. The aim is to gain knowledge of how electrified roads work and how the technology can be used in the future.

Sweden is one of the world’s leading countries in the development of technology for electrified roads. This type of technology is a way to develop environmentally friendly transport using the existing road network. It can be an excellent complement to today’s road and rail traffic, says Torbjörn Suneson, Acting Director-General of the Swedish Transport Administration.

The Swedish Transport Administration, in consultation with Vinnova and the Swedish Energy Agency, have chosen two suppliers to test their respective electrified roads solution. The two providers are Roserberg Development AB and Region Gavleborg. The trials are expected to be completed by 2018.

Roserberg Development AB will test a technique that involves an electric rail in the road itself, powering and charging the vehicle directly during its journey. Region Gavleborg will test a technique that involves a pantograph on the roof of the lorry’s cab feeding the current into an electric hybrid engine in the lorry.

It will be exciting to follow these practical projects so that we can gain better knowledge of how large the potential for efficiency improvements really is, while contributing to the development of society’s readiness to accept radical new solutions in transport and energy, says Swedish Energy Agency Director-General Erik Brandsma.

The Electrified Road Project is the largest ongoing pre-commercial procurement in Europe. The technologies to be tested by the test tracks aim to provide a knowledge-base for government, industry and academia on how electrified roads can work in the future.

This is the third and final stage of the procurement. Eleven providers expressed an interest in developing electrified roads in the contract’s first phase in 2013. The four providers who went forward to the next stage then produced detailed test track designs, and now two of these will actually build these test tracks in order to obtain the knowledge-base that the Swedish Transport Administration requires.

It is exciting that the test tracks will now become reality. Electrified roads can be of great importance in creating more sustainable transport in the future and at the same time can contribute to strengthening Sweden’s competitiveness. It is also a good example of how public authorities can use procurement to bring about new solutions, says Charlotte Brogren, Director-General of Vinnova.

(Source: Trafikverket)

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