DutchNews, September 19,
2016
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| An artists impression of a robot boat in action |
One of America’s leading universities is putting €20m into
developing robot boats which will be able to navigate the Amsterdam canals
without a captain.
The project, which will start trials next year, is a joint
research programme between the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the
Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Metropolitan Solutions, together with teams
from Delft and Wageningen universities.
The total budget for the five year Roboat
research project, which will be based in Amsterdam, is €25m.
‘Imagine a fleet
of autonomous boats for the transportation of goods and people,’ MIT professor
Carlo Ratti said in a statement. ‘But also think of dynamic and temporary
floating infrastructure like on-demand bridges and stages, that can be
assembled or disassembled in a matter of hours.’
Professor Arjan van Timmeren,
the AMS Institute’s scientific director said: ‘We’ll also be exploring
environmental sensing. We could for instance do further research on underwater
robots that can detect diseases at an early stage or use Roboats to rid the
canals from floating waste and find a more efficient way to handle the 12,000
bicycles that end up in the city’s canals each year.’
The first prototypes of Roboat
will be tested on the Amsterdam canals in 2017.

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