State Government begins monitoring the Traffic Center for COP30 in Belém
The Traffic Center has direct contact with the PRF Escort Center
The traffic in Belém has been monitored 24 hours since the early hours of Monday, the 3rd, when roadblocks began for the 30th United Nations Conference on Climate Change (COP30). All work is concentrated at the Traffic Center, integrated by the State Traffic Department (Detran), Municipal Secretariat of Security, Public Order, and Mobility of Belém (Segbel), Military Police, and Municipal Guard of Belém. The Traffic Center has direct contact with the Escort Center coordinated by the PRF.
In the two-story building on Avenida Senador Lemos, there are computers and video monitoring structures for the teams that will operate in traffic during the Conference. From there, the agencies will monitor the roads around the Parque da Cidade and the streets and avenues that will undergo changes during the event.
The teams will also visualize traffic occurrences, such as accidents, slow points, fluidity in the traffic perimeters of electric buses, and other situations that require immediate intervention.
Detran has prepared a large structure of agents and equipment to operate at the Traffic Center. All agents will be equipped with body cameras and electronic ticket books to streamline road inspections. At the Center, the agency's video monitoring will supervise the blocked roads in real-time to ensure safety, fluidity, and organization in accessing the Parque da Cidade.
"The Traffic Center is an important milestone in the integration between state and municipal agencies. The goal is to ensure that mobility during COP30 occurs with maximum safety, efficiency, and planning, minimizing the impacts on the population," highlighted Detran's general director, Renata Coelho.
"From this set of initiatives, we will know where each agent is, the need to relocate teams to certain points, areas that need reinforcement, inspection, more support for escorts, and any other occurrences necessary to minimize traffic impact throughout COP," details Detran's operations coordinator, Ivan Feitosa.
