For the lighting industry, this statement conveys three key strategic signals that will shape the sector's future development.
First, light poles become the core infrastructure platform. Along highways, lighting poles are the most widely distributed, evenly spaced, and reliably powered infrastructure assets. The concept of "multi-pole integration" is essentially based on using street lighting poles as the primary platform to consolidate surveillance poles, traffic sign poles, communication poles, and signal poles into a unified infrastructure system, enabling centralized and integrated deployment of multiple roadside facilities. Thanks to their extensive expertise in pole design, power supply systems, and installation planning, lighting companies are naturally well positioned to become the primary developers of this "one pole, multiple functions" model.
Second, "multi-sensor integration" drives product upgrading. The Action Plan calls for far more than simply installing additional sensors. It requires comprehensive, all-element perception of transportation infrastructure, traffic operations, and the road network environment under a wide range of complex conditions, including nighttime, rain, snow, and construction zones. As a result, smart light poles must evolve from serving merely as platforms for mounting integrated equipment to becoming intelligent hubs that fuse multiple sensing technologies. They will need to incorporate capabilities such as AI-powered video analytics, millimeter-wave radar, environmental monitoring, and road condition detection. This significantly raises the requirements for system integration while also increasing the technological sophistication and added value of lighting products.
Third, multimodal foundation models redefine the value of smart light poles. Once roadside sensing data is integrated into multimodal AI foundation models, smart light poles evolve from simple data collection terminals into edge intelligence nodes capable of supporting critical transportation applications such as traffic flow prediction, congestion management, free-flow tolling, and accident early warning. Consequently, the value of lighting products extends far beyond illumination. They become deeply integrated into transportation safety, operational efficiency, and intelligent traffic management. Revenue models will likewise evolve beyond hardware sales to include long-term service offerings such as data analytics, system operation, maintenance, and other value-added digital services.