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Rupert Stadler - "Mobility of Tomorrow: Connected Future"
Rupert Stadler - "Mobility of Tomorrow: Connected Future"
Communications
Speech
Mobility of tomorrow:
connected future
June 9, 2015 | Economic Conference, Berlin
Audi
Communications
Speech at the
Economic Conference of the CDU
Prof. Rupert Stadler
Chairman of the Board of Management of AUDI AG
Berlin, June 9, 2015
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For example, we are now carrying out a pilot project in Munich. DHL is placing customers purchases from
Amazon into the trunk of their Audi. The connected car opens up completely new business models.
Here is a second example of how we are responsible for far more than developing and producing cars. A
battery-powered car alone is not sufficient for electric mobility. We also organize services that go beyond
the car: from a battery-charging infrastructure to billing software to the second use of old batteries in solar
power systems.
Ladies and gentlemen,
The car of the future is growing beyond its old limits. It is becoming connected with its environment and
with other road users. This results in swarm intelligence. Cars are learning how to master new traffic
situations and to share that knowledge. And cities and cars are becoming connected with each other.
Cities are the main habitat of modern humans. Thats why we are primarily focusing our cars on urban
requirements. But what about the sparring partner? Will the city also become intelligent? My key message
for politicians is: Now is the time to occupy oneself with the technologies of tomorrow. This is the only way
that our public infrastructure projects will be fit for the future. Lets not wait for a big bang to occur. The
digital revolution is taking place every day this is the new normal. Business and politics in Germany
must shape the future together.
People in cities suffer from a chronic shortage of time. Space is limited. And alongside all the anonymity in
metropolises, digital life is promoting a new need for connectedness. And fourthly: Despite the strong urge
to live in cities, their inhabitants are increasingly demanding clean air and green areas for leisure. Anyone
who wants to develop an operating system for cities in the year 2030 has to operate with these variables:
time, space, connectivity and sustainability. The digital world will offer us unforeseen possibilities. Our
vision is an intelligent car in a smart city, everything in a flow and synchronized with each other.
Just think of all the information on the traffic situation. It makes a difference whether you simply drive into
a traffic jam, or hear a traffic announcement by chance, or see how your navigation system automatically
plans your route anew, or know that data on traffic density and speed from other road users smartphones
is flowing into the calculation in real time. We want more. Just imagine a smart city that takes account of
planned road blocks or expected disturbances before any hindrances are caused. This example alone shows
that it is worth creating interfaces between cities and mobility.
Digitalization is the key. The intelligent objects that I mentioned will soon include stop lights, traffic signs,
parking spaces, charging stations, buses, trains, bicycles and cars. This is a project with a long-term
perspective. A project that will only succeed if we synchronize our planning today. We know that 75 percent
of the urban infrastructure of the year 2050 has not yet been built today. This is a great opportunity. Every
infrastructure will have its own digital operating system. To make sure that all of that is compatible, we
need new forms of cooperation.
I will describe this to you with the example of stop-light info online. It calculates the optimal speed for
drivers to encounter the green wave (all lights on green). Already in 2013, 700 sets of stop lights in
Berlin were connected to our system. If we had stop-light info online all over Germany, we could reduce
fuel consumption by 15 percent, which adds up to 900 million liters a year! Fuel costs would be cut by
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more than a billion euros. CO2 emissions would be reduced by over two million tons. If we introduce this
technology to the benefit of our customers, we need the cities to install connected stop lights quickly. We
need uniform data formats, platforms and standards.
Or take the example of piloted driving. The driver will soon be able to let go of the steering wheel and leave
steering, overtaking, accelerating and braking to the system. The driver decides when the system should
take over. When driving is boring in traffic jams, attention suffers. That increases the risk of an accident. Or
when driving is too demanding in dangerous situations, the car provides help with intelligent assistants
(brakes, avoidance). Or thirdly, when the driver is diverted by a telephone call or wants to do something
urgent.
For controlled environments such as an autobahn, this is no longer a vision. Transport Minister Alexander
Dobrindt recently experienced it himself a behind the wheel of an Audi, but without any hands on that
steering wheel, driving at 130 km/h. For the start of the first Consumer Electronics Show in Asia, we
arranged for a car to drive in piloted mode through the heavy traffic of Shanghai. 90 percent of all
accidents are caused by human failure. Piloted driving will therefore increase safety enormously.
Which obstacles exist? At present, the international Vienna Convention on Road Traffic. The trouble is
that its from the year 1968, so its half a century old. It states that the driver of a vehicle (or person in
charge of animals) must always be in a position to master his vehicle. What does that mean today? Always
having ones hand on the steering wheel, as prescribed by traffic law? But there were no electronics or
computers in cars at that time in 1968.
Fortunately, the UN Transport Committee has recognized this: It is important to create the legal basis for
piloted driving: from driver liability to product liability and black box and insurance. And, according to
which ethics does a piloted car make decisions in critical situations? Piloted parking will also result in
enormous added value. The space required in a parking garage is reduced by one third because no space is
needed for getting out of and into the car. In this way, cities will gain space for parks for example.
And with autonomous driving functions on separate roads it might be possible in the distant future to
let ones car park itself a few hundred meters from ones destination in a city center, where the price of
land is considerably lower. If one thing is limited in cities, it is space. Automotive innovations could give us
more time and space. When we install sensors in the parking garages in this country, they will identify
vacant spaces and report on them. Smart parking without long searches can reduce CO2 emissions by 30
percent.
Technology can make our lives easier. What we need is a shared social understanding of how we want to
use technology in the future for more safety, efficiency, sustainability and quality of life for us all. All of
that can be promoted by technological progress in cars.
Germany has an excellent starting point when we remain aware of our own strengths: scientific excellence,
expertise in planning and responsible, and innovative entrepreneurship. We need a digital educational
initiative in line with the changing tasks and occupations ahead of us.
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Contact
Jrgen De Graeve
Corporate Communications
Tel.: +49 841 89 34084
juergen.degraeve@audi.de
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