This paper describes interim results of the ongoing CEDR-funded "FALCON" project, which aims to introduce a step improvement in transport efficiency in Europe through the definition of a new performance-oriented legislative framework for road freight transport, thus ensuring a proper match between vehicles and the infrastructure. A Smart Infrastructure Access Policy (SIAP) is being developed as the primary method of regulation, in which policy explicitly specifies the performance level required from the road freight vehicle with respect to safety, manoeuvrability, infrastructure loading, and environmental impact, while giving consideration to national topologies and operational conditions. This method is fundamentally different to the prescriptive approach which mandates only mass and dimension limits of vehicles. The prescriptive approach only indirectly and often ineffectively ensures acceptable vehicle performance, as is the case of current prescriptive European legislation (96/53/EC).
Reference:
Kural, K. et al. 2018. Smart infrastructure access policy: a highway towards more efficient road transport. Proceedings of the 7th Transport Research Arena (TRA), Vienna, Austria, 16-19 April 2018
Kural, K., de Saxe, C. C., Kharrazi, S., Asp, T., Kraaijenhagen, B., & Pauwelussen, J. (2018). Smart infrastructure access policy: a highway towards more efficient road transport. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/10214
Kural, K, Christopher C de Saxe, S Kharrazi, T Asp, B Kraaijenhagen, and J Pauwelussen. "Smart infrastructure access policy: a highway towards more efficient road transport." (2018): http://hdl.handle.net/10204/10214
Kural K, de Saxe CC, Kharrazi S, Asp T, Kraaijenhagen B, Pauwelussen J, Smart infrastructure access policy: a highway towards more efficient road transport; 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/10214 .