And in the U.K., there are attempts to bring that far distant future a little closer. Scottish bus manufacturer Alexander Dennis revealed in January a new electric automated bus with plans for it to start carrying passengers around Cambridge’s biomedical campus this year following track-based testing.
While buses are going driverless, trains are also using technology to stay on track — literally. Network Rail, the operator of the U.K.’s rail infrastructure, has shared some of the ways it’s using advanced methods to stay on top of safety issues, including landslips and damage to railway bridges caused by traffic accidents.
In 2022, it began using inclinometers as part of a trial, with the wireless sensors being set up along a length of track to detect rock and soil movement and send an alert when it registers a five-degree tilt. The solar-powered sensors are paired with CCTV and advanced weather forecasting to spot areas at risk of landslips and let engineers take action before it impacts services.
Similarly, Network Rail is now using remote sensors to monitor vehicles hitting railway bridges — one of the most common causes of rail delays. The Harlaxton Bridge in Grantham, Lincolnshire, is covered in warning signs, yet the curved foundation was hit by trucks 14 times between 2023 and 2024, including three incidents in the space of a week, leading to more than $600,000 of damage and 60 hours of delays. A new trial of sensors will alert engineers to bridge strikes in real time to speed up response times and damage assessments.
“While we know we cannot prevent all future incidents, this technology will cut the inspection time after a bridge strike from hours to seconds in many cases,” Michael Clegg, a route engineer at Network Rail, said. “This means we can have trains running again much sooner after a bridge strike, providing a boost to the reliability of the railway and saving potentially hundreds of thousands of pounds.”
With Chinese rail manufacturer CRRC recently unveiling a train capable of travelling at speeds of 280 miles per hour — making it the fastest conventional passenger train in the world — rail safety is paramount. However they’re traveling, and whomever is doing the driving, passengers want to know they’ll make it to their destination safely.