NTSB has long advocated for revolutionary safety tech
WASHINGTON (August 16, 2024) –The National Transportation Safety Board applauded a new plan from the U.S. Department of Transportation to deploy vehicle-to-everything, or V2X, technology across U.S. roads and highways, which the NTSB has been advocating for since 1995.
V2X technology relies on direct communication between vehicles and infrastructure to prevent crashes. The NTSB has a long history of advocating for collision warning technologies and V2X starting nearly 30 years ago, when it asked the U.S. DOT to begin testing collision warning systems in commercial fleets. In 2022, after a crash in which five people died and 50 were injured, NTSB asked the Department of Transportation to develop a plan for nationwide deployment of V2X technology and resolve the current roadblocks to its deployment.
“This plan is a vital first step towards realizing the full lifesaving potential of this technology, which we’ve supported for decades,” NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy said in remarks delivered today. “V2X can reverse the crisis on our roads and fundamentally transform our nation’s transportation landscape—that’s a future worth fighting for.”
The NTSB currently has 10 open recommendations related to V2X technologies and is reviewing the DOT plan to determine whether it would satisify any of those recommendations. More resources on V2X technology and its safety benefits can be found on the NTSB’s website.
“The USDOT’s V2X deployment plan is a crucial milestone to achieving nationwide V2X deployment, and I commend the USDOT, FHWA, and ITS JPO for their leadership and commitment to this life saving technology, said Michael Graham, an NTSB board member who has championed the technology. “But this plan is not the finish line, it is a call to action. This plan demands action from automakers, suppliers, infrastructure owner operators, and regulators to achieve the full life saving potential of V2X technology.”
To report an incident/accident or if you are a public safety agency, please call 1-844-373-9922 or 202-314-6290 to speak to a Watch Officer at the NTSB Response Operations Center (ROC) in Washington, DC (24/7).