Federation showcased at 5GAA Gothenburg
29 Apr 2026[Press Release]
Mobilidata highlighted in federation live demo
Last Thursday, April 23, at the 5GAA event in Gothenburg, national road authorities AWV, Vegvesen, and Trafikverket demonstrated a cross-border federated data sharing environment. The data was consumed and showcased directly in BMW vehicles.
Technology providers RISE, Monotch, and Bosch realized this demo in close coordination with the respective road authorities and BMW.
For this demonstration, the production environments of AWV (Mobilidata) and Vegvesen were connected in a network of federated data exchanges, joined by the Trafikverket pilot Interchange. The federation was realized using the C-Roads II interface, with central federation components provided by Monotch.
The featured use case focuses on exchanging safety-related road information, demonstrating how warnings such as road works notifications can be exchanged efficiently across national environments and seamlessly reach connected vehicles. That matters because passenger cars, trucks, and logistics fleets cross borders every day, while road works and hazards do not recognize national boundaries.
Reinhard Jurk, Senior Expert Automotive Cloud, BMW, says, “Ensuring our BMW vehicles could receive Road Works Warnings through federated platforms was straightforward within a standardized environment such as Mobilidata. This allowed our teams to establish the connection efficiently and with limited integration effort.”
The Gothenburg showcase reinforced a broader industry reality: connected mobility advances fastest when proven public infrastructure and private innovation work together in real time. Together, cross-border interoperability is brought from ambition to an operational reality.
Wim Vandenberghe, expert C-ITS and CCAM at Agentschap Wegen en Verkeer, concludes, “This demonstration shows how investments in digital infrastructure can extend beyond national deployment. By enabling federation with other countries, we can ensure that safety-related information continues to reach road users, even when they cross borders.”