New Developments in Snow Removal Technology: The Path to Autonomy and Environmental Friendliness
Modern developments in snow removal technology are focused on overcoming three key challenges: increasing efficiency and speed of work, reducing the environmental footprint, and minimizing the human factor in risky conditions. The evolution is not only about increasing power but also through the integration of smart city technologies, robotics, and alternative energy.
1. Autonomous and Robotic Systems
This trend shifts the focus from machine control to fleet management.
Autonomous snowplows based on GPS and sensors: Leading manufacturers (such as Boschung Group in Switzerland, Roxxter in Germany) are developing and testing fully autonomous machines. They use a combination of high-precision GPS (RTK), lidars, radars, and cameras to build a 3D map of the terrain and navigate. Programmed to clear specific areas, they operate without an operator, such as at night on parking lots of hypermarkets or runways. An interesting example: Autonomous tractors for runway cleaning were tested at Tokyo Haneda Airport.
Robotic modules for sidewalks: These are small electric snowplow robots (such as Snowbot S1, Norris) designed for sidewalk, bike path, and pedestrian zone cleaning. They navigate obstacles independently, work on a scheduled schedule, and return to the charging station. Their key advantage is work in confined spaces and solving the "last mile" problem.
2. Electrification and Hybrid Powertrains
Fighting emissions and noise is a priority, especially in cities.
Completely electric snowplows: Models with large-capacity battery packs are emerging. For example, the Canadian company Lion Electric has presented an electric truck for municipal services that can be equipped with a plow. Advantages: zero emissions, low noise level, ability to work in enclosed spaces (terminals, depots). The main challenge is reducing battery capacity in the cold and the need for a powerful charging inf ...
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