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This document discusses the development of transport policy aimed at achieving "green" intermodal transport by integrating land, rail, air, and sea transport into a cohesive eTransport framework. It emphasizes the importance of creating seamless transport systems and information flows, requiring standardized architecture across different transport modes. Key points include the need for a unified vocabulary, clear interface definitions, and an accepted framework to support progress. The conclusions highlight that improved intermodality promotes sustainable transport solutions that benefit the environment.
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eNavigation Element in eTransport Dr. Knut Torsethaugen, SINTEF Cdr. Svein Ording, Semekor AS NNF 17.10.2007
Development of transport policy: Towards “Green” intermodal transport From land-, rail-, air- and sea-transport to eTransport
Development of intermodal transport architecture - Technical and policy driven
Architecture as a tool for standardization across transport modes Ex.: MarNIS - eMaritime part of eTransport architecture
From land-, rail-, air- and sea-transport to eTransport Development of transport policy: Towards “Green” intermodal transport Use and further development of ITS architecture Architecture as a tool for standardization across transport modes
Conclusions • Seemless transport is essensial • Seemless information flows necessarry • Amalgamation of vocabulary required • Definition of interfaces important • Accepted framework support progress • Agreed architecture key factor • Improved intermodality promotes GREEN transport