Autopass
Autopass (stylized autoPASS) is an electronic toll collection system used in Norway. It allows collecting road tolls automatically from cars. It uses electronic radio transmitters and receivers operating at 5.8 GHz (MD5885) supplied by the Norwegian companies Q-Free and Fenrits.
Technology
The system involves the installation of a DSRC based radio transponder on the windscreen of a vehicle, and to sign an agreement with one of the toll collection companies in Norway. Tolls are charged at toll plazas as before, but cars can drive past in over 100 km/h. The system is administrated by the Norwegian Public Roads Administration. All public toll roads but one in Norway use the system, in addition to tests for use of the system on some car ferries. The primary reason that some projects don't support Autopass is that they charge both for the car and for passengers, which the system cannot support. All projects using Autopass can only charge per car. The only manual toll road left is the Atlantic Ocean Tunnel.
Each Autopass unit contains a microcontroller which will process requests from the road side, and respond with the proper information to the road side.
There are 5 generations of cryptographic key pairs inside each Autopass unit, which are unique for each unit. The cryptographic keys are used for authenticating the unit when passing a toll plaza, thus making it difficult to make fraudulent copies of an Autopass unit. Unlike similar DSRC based tolling systems used in many countries, there is no access control in the Norwegian system, the unique ID within the unit is available to be read for those who have the proper DSRC equipment.
There is an internal storage space for 100 log entries, which are normally updated each time a vehicle owner is charged when passing a toll plaza. This is a collection of receipt entries which includes the time, date and the station identity of the toll plaza which did the tolling transaction.
Each Autopass unit features a move detect mechanism. When the unit is removed from the windscreen, an electrical switch will be activated, causing a flag to be set in processor within the Autopass unit. This flag will be registered when doing a tolling transaction the next time the unit passes a toll plaza.
Obligatory tag for heavy vehicles
As of 1 January 2015 it is compulsory for all vehicles over 3.5 tonnes which are registered to an enterprise, state, county or municipal administration, or which are otherwise primarily used for business purposes, to have an electronic toll payment tag when driving in Norway. The provision has its legal basis in regulations that were adopted on 10 October 2014. It applies to all above-mentioned Norwegian and foreign vehicles on the entire public road network. Failure to carry a toll payment tag will result in a fine of 8,000 NOK. Failure to pay within three weeks means that the penalty charge will be increased to 12,000 NOK. If you are stopped twice without a tag within a period of two years, you will be fined 16,000 NOK.[1]
Supporting toll plazas
- Toll rings
- Bergen
- Namsos
- Oslo
- Nord-Jæren
- Trondheim
- Tønsberg
- Haugesund
- Highways
- E6 Oppland
- E6/E18 Østfold
- E16 Bolstad
- E16 Oppland
- E18 Aust-Agder
- E18 Vestfold
- E18 Lister
- E39 Øysand–Thamshavn
- E134 Åkrafjorden
- E16 Kløfta–Nybakk
- Rv 7 Sokna-Ørgenvika
- Rv 9 Setesdal
- Rv 13 Svelgane
- Rv 35 Hadeland
- Fv 7 Kvam
- Bridges and tunnels
- Former
- Rennesøy Fixed Link
- Hvaler Tunnel
- E6 Grillstad–Værnes
See also
External links
References
- ↑ Obligatory tag for heavy vehicles Archived January 8, 2015, at the Wayback Machine.