Karnataka

New Uber tool ‘Movement’ that helps track traffic patterns launched for Bengaluru

Written by : IANS

The US-based ride-sharing giant Uber on Wednesday rolled out its traffic "Movement" tool for Bengaluru after launching it earlier in Delhi and Mumbai.

"Movement" is a free urban planning software tool accessible through movement.uber.com.

"Through our mapping team, we have gathered large amounts of traffic and congestion data for Bengaluru," Christian Freese, Uber spokesperson, said in a statement.

The company hopes to play a key role in solving the mobility challenges of the tech hub along with the government, civil society and other stakeholders.

"Our tool will encourage better infrastructure, city planning and data driven policy solutions to make Bengaluru more efficient," asserted Freese.

Data from the tool reveals that travel time doubles during peak hour traffic in cities like Bengaluru, Delhi, Kolkata and Mumbai. Travel time also get impacted during festivals like Diwali.

A study on the impact of the metro service extension project from Kadugodi at Whitefield from Bagmane tech park at Baiyappanahalli in the eastern suburb shows 13.5 per cent increase in the morning peak travel time and 16.4 per cent during the evening peak hours due to congestion en route.

"The data also reveals the difference in the peak travel time during a weekday and weekend, with 57 minutes average time during the first quarter of 2020," added the statement.

The tool also indicated that after the metro service is extended to Whitefield from Baiyappanahalli, travel time on the route will reduce 21 per cent.

According to a study by consulting firm Boston Consulting Group, traffic congestion during peak hours in the metros costs the economy a whopping $22 billion annually.

Who spread unblurred videos of women? SIT probe on Prajwal Revanna must find

BJP could be spending more crores than it declared, says report

Building homes through communities of care: A case study on trans accommodation from HCU

‘State-sanctioned casteism’: Madras HC on continuation of manual scavenging

‘Don’t need surgery certificate for binary change of gender in passports’: Indian govt