Site icon RCR Wireless News

IoT makes trucking safer for drivers, before potentially replacing them

source; Otto/Youtube

Current long-haul trucking inefficiencies

We have all stopped at a rest station during a road trip and parked in the small gaps between the 18-wheeled trucks filled with sleeping drivers. Those drivers are often tasked to drive cross country to deliver an order. Because of the risks associated with driving for long periods of time in potentially dangerous conditions, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has enacted regulations limiting the number of hours a long-haul truck driver can work:

According to Truckinfo.net, trucking employs around 8.9 million people, and the total value of goods delivered or routed by trucks in the U.S. alone is more than $1 trillion, if you include truck trade with Canada and Mexico. And drivers are increasingly hard to come by. The American Trucking Association reported in 2014 a shortage of truck drivers – especially long-haul, who are often required to spend weeks away from home. Shipping a full truckload from L.A. to New York costs around $4,500 today, with labor representing 75% of that cost, according to TechCrunch.

“Internet of things”-based systems have the potential to provide solutions for the inefficiencies brought on by regulations and a diminishing workforce.

What can truck drivers do with IoT?

The long-haul trucking industry can implement IoT systems in a number of ways to make things easier for both drivers and their shipping companies. Trucks can now use reliable two-way communication between the driver and the dispatcher to reduce costs and delays, and give greater visibility to shippers and trucking companies.

Here are a number of other use cases that can transform the long-haul trucking industry, according to Samsung:

Making driving a better experience, or not one at all

Instrumenting drivers with sensors that track vital signs and forwarding that data to a cloud-based platform via a cellular network could be another approach to improving safety in the trucking industry.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bK76W1kH4jA

“Think of truck drivers going on long journeys,” said Jason Lynch, Analog Devices’ director of IoT strategy, to IoT Journal. “Tracking each driver’s movements and vital signs could offer fleet managers some insight into that individual’s health or level of fatigue.”

Otto, an autonomous truck company recently purchased by Uber, wants to get rid of the driver altogether. It made a kit used to retrofit semis for autonomous operation. The company believes trucking to be a logical place for autonomous vehicles to take root, given the high cost of the vehicles – around $150,000 apiece, according to Wired. This makes the kit’s $30,000 price tag more palatable – and the proposition of being able to have a “driver” take a nap in the truck’s cab once his or her shift ends.

Last year, Daimler demonstrated an autonomously operated 18-wheeler that it predicts could be deployed commercially within a decade. Otto is the first company to offer a retrofitting solution to fleets that already have invested in late-model trucks.

Exit mobile version