India’s highways may soon ‘talk’ to vehicles under new CCV protocol
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. New Delhi: India is laying the groundwork for an ambitious push into autonomous vehicles while also supporting the rising demand for electric vehicles in the country.
The government is developing a new system called the Connected Commercial Vehicle (CCV) protocol, which would allow different types of vehicles and infrastructure to communicate using a single standard, making it easier for them to operate together seamlessly, two officials familiar with the development said. The plan is being drawn up to address the gap between smart vehicles that are inherently capable of vehicle-to-everything (V2X) connectivity and surrounding infrastructure that is not responsive to these vehicles, said the first of the two officials cited earlier, both of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity.
V2X is a communication system that allows vehicles to communicate and exchange information with other vehicles, and infrastructure including traffic lights and toll booths. Officials of the Union road transport and highways ministry, the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI), as well as the NITI Aayog, along with other relevant ministries and industry representatives have begun discussions on this plan, this official said.
The development assumes significance given that robotaxi services and autonomous trucking and logistics companies including Waymo (Alphabet Inc.), Baidu Apollo Go, Zoox (Amazon), WeRide, Aurora, Kodiak, Nuro and Clevon have been gaining traction overseas. Waymo and Zoox did not immediately respond to Mint’s queries.
Queries emailed to the ministry of road transport and highways, NHAI, and NITI Aayog on 19 December remained unanswered. Queries to Maruti Suzuki, and Tata Motors, which
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