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As Storms Driven By Climate Change Batter South Africa’s Roads, AI Takes Up the Watch

The Western Cape is enlisting Bentley System's Blyncsy—already at work across the U.S. and Europe—to scan 5,000 kilometers of roadway in South Africa for hazards, part of a global play using machine learning and AI to stretch shrinking budgets and save lives.

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Tomas Kellner

Aerial view of a coastal South Africa town with white houses, curved streets, and a sandy beach by turquoise ocean waves shaped by climate change.
Over 3,100 miles of provincial roadway in South Africa's Western Cape Province are the focus of a new AI deployment.

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Cape Town’s roads are about to get a new set of eyes. Bentley Systems just announced that the Western Cape Government’s Department of Infrastructure will deploy its AI-powered Blyncsy platform across roughly 5,000 kilometers (about 3,100 miles) of provincial roadway. The system will use crowdsourced dashcam imagery and machine-learning models to automatically flag damaged guardrails, missing street signs, faulty streetlights, vegetation creeping into sight lines, and debris—a growing concern as the province absorbs more frequent and severe storms.Ā 

The South African project marks Bentley’s first rollout in Africa and its latest step in a global push that already spans the United States and Europe.Ā 

The news comes as Western Cape officials confront a familiar global challenge: tight budgets, aging assets, and weather that no longer behaves the way it used to. Recent flooding has cut off entire towns, and the Department of Infrastructure is betting that better data—delivered faster and cheaper than traditional windshield surveys—will help it spend its R4.56 billion transport budget where it matters most.Ā 

“Providing safe and resilient infrastructure is the foundation of economic opportunity in the Western Cape, particularly as we manage the impacts of climate change on our road network,” said Johannes Neethling, the province’s chief engineer for transport infrastructure systems. “By integrating Blyncsy’s AI technology, we are gaining a level of visibility that was previously impossible.”Ā 

Blyncsy,Ā which BentleyĀ acquiredĀ in 2023, has been growing in the U.S.Ā ItsĀ imagery mapĀ nowĀ covers designated roads in every state, with a sample reflectivity score for each capital city.Ā The technologyĀ also hasĀ been steadily expanding into European markets. The platform was conceived more than a decade ago by Bentley executive Mark Pittman after he found himself stuck inĀ his carĀ behindĀ a brokenĀ trafficĀ signal, wondering why agencies still relied on guesswork and ad-hoc inspections to manage a U.S. road network that carries roughly 70% of the goods Americans consume.Ā Ā 

Earlier this year, theĀ Hawai’i Department of Transportation launched its “Eyes on the Road”Ā program, distributing 1,000 high-definition dashcams to residents whose anonymized footage feeds the same AI platform now coming to South Africa.Ā Hawai’i is a useful case study: sun, salty air, torrential rain, lush vegetation,Ā and even volcanic activity grind away at roads that thread across each island, where a single washout can sever a community.Ā As ofĀ early January, 898 drivers on O’ahu had signed up to share footage, with the state actively recruiting more onĀ the islands ofĀ Hawai’i Island, Maui,Ā and Kaua’i.Ā 

Alabama is also usingĀ the technology. The state’s Department of Transportation, whichĀ oversees roughly 11,000 milesĀ (about 17,700Ā kilometers)Ā of state roads and highways, is among the firstĀ in theĀ U.S.Ā to adopt performance-based budgeting for road maintenance. The stateĀ is now feeding that system with AI-generated condition data,Ā allocatingĀ dollars based on what the roadsĀ actually needĀ rather than what each district requested the year before. A pilotĀ demonstrated 97% accuracy in identifyingĀ more than 50 types of roadway assets and defects, from cracked guardrails to faded pavement markings.Ā Ā 

The shiftĀ toĀ technology-basedĀ systemsĀ is being acceleratedĀ in the U.S.Ā by a Federal Highway Administration deadline this SeptemberĀ that will requireĀ every state and local transportation agency to adopt a method for maintainingĀ minimum pavement marking ā€œretroreflectivity.ā€Ā That’sĀ a measure of how well lane stripes bounce headlights back at drivers, andĀ it’sĀ a factor in roadway departure crashes that rank among the leading causes of U.S. traffic fatalities. Bentley says the Blyncsy approach delivers comparable insights to legacy 360-degree imagery surveys—work that once ran up to $300 per mile and took five months—atĀ roughly halfĀ the cost and 98% faster.Ā 

The Western Cape launch also extends a busy stretch for Bentley’s Asset Analytics business, which in December closed acquisitions of Talon Aerolytics and the technology and team of Pointivo to expand into telecom towers and electric grids. “They also add to our technical and business momentum and help infrastructure owners and operators improve the performance and resilience of their assets,” James Lee, Bentley’s chief operating officer, wroteĀ ofĀ the deals.Ā 

“The expansion of Blyncsy into the Western Cape of South Africa represents a pivotal step in our mission to provide global transportation agencies with real-time visibility into the state of their infrastructure,” said Pittman, who is now senior director of transportation AI at Bentley. “Our goal remains clear: to replace historical precedent with AI-driven insights that reduce risk, lower costs, and ultimately save lives.”Ā 

FAQ:

With climate change driving more frequent and severe storms, the province is deploying Blyncsy’s AI platform across 5,000 kilometers of roadway to automatically flag hazards like damaged guardrails and debris faster and cheaper than traditional manual surveys.

The system uses a combination of crowdsourced high-definition dashcam imagery and advanced machine-learning models. This data feeds the AI, which automatically scans the footage to identify safety issues ranging from faulty streetlights and missing signs to vegetation creeping into driver sightlines.

Yes, Blyncsy is already operational across the United States and is expanding in Europe. For example, Hawai’i uses the platform via 1,000 dashcams distributed to residents to monitor storm and volcanic damage, while Alabama uses the AI-generated condition data to drive its performance-based maintenance budget with 97% accuracy.

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