Govt launches first wireless traffic controller

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 The Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC) has developed the first wireless road traffic controller technology at around one-third price of the international product, and will help in controlling traffic from any remote location. "If we have wireless traffic control system it will help us collate data, it will help us show if traffic is heavy, it can move forward quickly. You will also get to know the number of vehicles on a particular route…kind of parking facility required," law and telecom minister Kapil Sibal said. C-DAC is the premier R&D organisation of the department of electronics and information technology (DEITY), ministry of communications & information technology for carrying out R&D in IT, electronics and associated areas.

 

The government has invested Rs 14.75 crore in its research and development. The minister handed over the technology developed by a CDAC-lead consortium to eight domestic companies for commercially producing the machine for which government will charge royalty of Rs  15,000 for every wireless traffic control system (WiTraC) that will be installed. The system can run without power for three days. "The system suits Indian traffic and is different from products developed abroad," DEITY secretary J Satyanarayana said.

 

The WiTraC system run completely on solar power and it can be mounted on poles without any effort to dig roads etc for laying wires. The system can be controlled from any remote location without need of traffic police to visit the spot. "Existing partners who assisted us in developing technology are required to pay Rs 15 lakh for technology transfer and new partners will have to pay Rs 18.75 lakh for the same," DEITY group director Debashis Dutta said. The Jaipur-based Shakti Enterprise, Delhi-based Onnyx Electronics, Gurgaon-based Envoys Electronics, Electro-Ads from Indore, Delhi Integrated Multimode Transit System, Metro Infrasys, Bharat Electronics and Keltron signed agreement for producing WiTraC. "Only the traffic controller module when imported from abroad costs in the range of $10,000 to12,000 (Rs 6-7 lakh) which excludes training cost and other expenses. This (government developed) module should cost around Rs 2 lakh per controller," Envoys Electronics managing director Rasmeet Kohli said.

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