ROAD SAFETY IN COUNTRIES WITH LESS DEVELOPED INFRASTRUCTURES: Policies to maximize effect with minimum resources

Similar documents
CEDR N5 Improvements in the field of Road Safety New trends in member states Road Safety strategies

A Road Safety Strategy for Greece

ROAD SAFETY: the European Union Strategy and Efforts

The Road Safety Performance Review Case of Albania

Road Safety Vademecum

Road Safety Annual Report 2016 OECD/ITF Chapter 26. Morocco

Road safety in Greece Ministry of Infrastructure, Transport and Networks Dr Evi Blana Secretariat of Bi-ministerial Committee of Road Safety

EGYPT: a national decade of action for road safety

The experience of Spain in reducing road deaths in urban areas

Key fields for RRSS 7/6/2009

Civil Society. Dialogue for Progress

[ Fundación PONS ] [ Fundación PONS ] [ Expertise PONS ] Investing in road safety

ROAD SAFETY: Towards a European Road Safety Area: Policy orientations on road safety

2 nd Road Safety PIN Conference 23 June 2008 Countdown to only two more years to act!

Road Safety Partnership

Road Safety Strategy of Nepal for Resilient and Sustainable Development

Traffic Safety Basic Facts Main Figures. Traffic Safety Basic Facts Road Safety. Urban Areas. Country Overview.

Road Safety Pledge. Route to vision zero 2050 in Europe The Hague, June 14th, Malta. Luxembourg Lithuania Latvia Italy

Traffic Safety Basic Facts Main Figures. Traffic Safety Basic Facts Road Safety. Urban Areas. Country Overview.

Traffic Safety Basic Facts Main Figures. Traffic Safety Basic Facts Road Safety. Urban Areas. Country Overview.

Polish-Nordic Road Forum/3rd 26/10/2017 Vilnius

November 2, Government takes on the challenge of improving traffic safety

Mid Term Review of the European Commission s Road Safety Policy Orientations

Austrian Road Safety Programme

Road Safety Institute Panos Mylonas

Traffic Safety Basic Facts Main Figures. Traffic Safety Basic Facts Road Safety. Urban Areas. Country Overview.

Road safety. REGIONAL COMMITTEE Provisional Agenda item 8.5. SEA/RC70/11 Malé, Maldives 6 10 September July Seventieth Session

EU Directive EC 2008/96 and EU Policy Orientations on Road Safety Bernd Strnad Austrian Road Safety Board Trans-European North-South

MINISTRY OF TRANSPORT AND COMMUNICATIONS OF THE REPUBLIC OF LITHUANIA

Road safety at road and rail interface

Addressing the challenges of road safety in India: Are there lessons from Australia?

ROAD TRAFFIC SAFETY IN BELARUS CURRENT SITUATION

Napier City road trauma for Napier City. Road casualties Estimated social cost of crashes* Major road safety issues.

Road Safety Status of Nepal Arjun Jung Thapa DDG, Department of Roads Planning and Design Branch

Toward Zero Deaths: Proactive Steps for Your Community

Comprehensive Measures to Reduce Traffic Accident Fatalities

Traffic Safety Basic Facts Main Figures. Traffic Safety Basic Facts Road Safety. Urban Areas. Country Overview.

Journée d étude consacrée à la sécurité routière des deux roues. European Commission's view of cycling safety. Casto López Benítez

Road safety training for professional drivers: worldwide practices

SEETO ROAD SAFETY STRATEGY SURVEY

Workshop on serious road traffic injuries. Brussels, 27 November 2015

ADDIS ABABA ROAD SAFETY STRATEGY

Initiatives and Actions on the fight against drink driving

ECA-ECE-ICAP Workshop on Improving Road Safety Situation in Africa: UN Road Safety Conventions and Approaches to Preventing Drink Driving

Road Safety Trends, Targets and Safety Programs in New Zealand. by Dr Shane Turner

Government Accelerators

Active and Passive Safety Passenger Car Technologies: Potentials to Save Lives in India. Pradeep Puthan, Prateek Thalya, Nils Lubbe

BLACK SPOTS MANAGEMENT - SLOVENIAN EXPERIENCE

BUILDING THE CZECH ROAD SAFETY OBSERVATORY

Country fact sheet South Korea

ROAD SAFETY IN RUSSIA

Manifesto for a safe, efficient and sustainable transport in NZ

EUROPEAN MOBILITY WEEK September 2015

road safety issues 2002 road trauma for Tauranga District July 2003 Regional crash causes Estimated social cost of crashes*

COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS

Strategic Road Safety Plan for Catalonia Approved by Government Agreement of January 14, 2014 Submitted to the Parliament of Catalonia on

Closing address and Summary RS4C Beijing Kent Gustafson Chairman scientific Committee

Road Users Safety Effective Measures. Alain Areal

Reducing Fatalities and Serious Injuries on County Roads

Traffic Safety Basic Facts Main Figures. Traffic Safety Basic Facts Road Safety. Urban Areas. Country Overview.

M. DAVID WILDE Coordinateur National du département investigation et analyse des accidents Trafikverket PALAIS DES CONGRÈS NAMUR 15/06/2012

Road Safety Country Overview November Norway

TABLE of CONTENTS. Section Overview & Objectives Traffic Response Units 1 & 2. Traffic Education Unit..3 & 4

Pedestrian injuries in San Francisco: distribution, causes, and solutions

Drivers: United Nations road safety conventions

ROAD SAFETY ANNUAL REPORT 2018 ISRAEL

Road Safety Action Plan

IMPROVEMENT OF THE ROAD TRAFFIC SAFETY WITH THE VIEW TO NATIONAL STRATEGY. Ministry of Transport and Communications

Mission: The mission of FARS is to make vehicle crash information accessible and useful so that traffic safety can be improved

Deaths/injuries in motor vehicle crashes per million hours spent travelling, July 2007 June 2011 (All ages) Mode of travel

road safety issues 2001 road toll for Gisborne district July 2002 Road user casualties Estimated social cost of crashes*

Relation between traffic safety and environmental protection

PLANNING FOR SUSTAINABLE PEDESTRIAN INFRASTRUCTURE NALIN SINHA INITIATIVE FOR TRANSPORTATION & DEVELOPMENT PROG. (ITD), DELHI

Research Objectives Investigate the basic elements of cost-benefit evaluation techniques through the assessment of selected road safety measures in Gr

Automated Traffic Enforcement Technology Guidelines

Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police Association canadienne des chefs de police

"Prevenção de Acidentes e Lesões no Trânsito para Melhorar a Segurança dos Trabalhadores"

Introduction. 2

A Critical Review of International Road Safety Databases

2003 road trauma for. Wairoa District. Road casualties Estimated social cost of crashes* Major road safety issues WAIROA DISTRICT JULY 2004

Road Safety Strategy

Background. The scale of the problem. The scale of the problem. Road Safety in London, the statistics. 280 Fatalities from road crashes in 2002

British Road Safety: Presentation 28/10/2009 by Duncan Price, Deputy Head, Road User Safety Division

Institute of Transportation Engineers Safety Action Plan

Road Transport. 1. Long-Term Change of Road Traffic Accidents The number of fatalities in traffic accidents increased for the first time in 15 years.

ROSEE RSA/RSI Introduction courses ROSEE Speed Management courses

The African Road Safety Observatory

MAKING WALKING AND CYCLING ON EUROPE S ROADS SAFER Volvo Safety Days 8/11/ 2017

Road Safety: African Action Plan for the Global Decade of Action for Road Safety

Deliverable D3.2 Assembly of Basic Fact Sheets 2010

A Road Safety Decade - The Case for Action

RESTRICTED ROADS (20 MPH SPEED LIMIT) (SCOTLAND) BILL. 1. Is reducing the speed limit to 20mph the best way of achieving the aims of the Bill?

TEXAS TRAFFIC SAFETY TASK FORCE. Jeff Moseley Texas Transportation Commission

Toward Zero Deaths. Regional SHSP Road Show Meeting. Virginia Strategic Highway Safety Plan. presented by

EuroRAP s priorities. Road Safety: no Safe System without forgiving roads

New Road Safety Strategy Aims to Ensure Canada Has World s Safest Roads

MEMORANDUM. City Constituents. Leilani Schwarcz, Vision Zero Surveillance Epidemiologist, SFDPH

Global Plan. Decade of Action for Road Safety

Prof. Dr. Karl Viktor Schaller Director of Engineering and Purchasing MAN Nutzfahrzeuge AG

Members of the Cavan Road Safety Working Together Group

Transcription:

ROAD SAFETY IN COUNTRIES WITH LESS DEVELOPED INFRASTRUCTURES: Policies to maximize effect with minimum resources Prof G. A. Giannopoulos Head, Hellenic Institute of Transport National Center for Research and Technology, Greece Past president, European Conference of Transport Research Institutes - ECTRI

1991 today A period of general decline in road accidents in European countries Hungary:

1991 today A period of general decline in road accidents in European countries Greece:

1991 today A period of general decline in road accidents in European countries Portugal:

1991 today A period of general decline in road accidents in European countries Slovenia:

Notable in the European experience: The old EU member states (e.g. Greece, Portugal, Ireland) show reduction in both fatalities and injuries. New members with lesser developed infrastructures (e.g. Estonia, Slovenia, Latvia) show decline in fatalities but increase in the number of injured (34% in Estonia, 24% in Latvia, 57% in Slovenia). Old member states show reductions in the number of accidents (Portugal: 19%, Greece: 32%, Ireland: 33%) New members show increases in most cases (48% in Slovenia, 20% in Latvia and 27% in Estonia, but Poland: reduction 19%).

The basic premise of this paper is that besides the obvious road safety improvements that can be made by constructing large scale road infrastructures and more intelligent ones, substantial results can also be achieved through softer measures.

Softer measures fall in the following eight categories: 1. Road safety education & awareness raising campaigns 2. Driver Education, Training & Licensing 3. Rehabilitation and Re-Licensing of existing drivers 4. Better maintained Vehicles 5. Small scale infrastructure improvements 6. Enforcement and monitoring actions 7. Institutional and Organisational strengthening, and 8. Post Accident Care.

ROAD SAFETY EDUCATION & AWARENESS CAMPAIGNS The target is the minds of the people (drivers and pedestrians). Education for children of school age. Education of adults - special training programmes. Road Safety Campaigns (European examples: Bob Campaign, Bodi PreViden - Be careful, First ride - safe ride ), road safety competitions. etc.

DRIVER EDUCATION, TRAINING & LICENSING EU Directive for drivers training and examination: 91/439/EEC and 2000/56/EC. Stiffen the rules for new driver training and licensing. Provide certification for authorised Driving Schools. Training programmes for heavy goods transport drivers (especially for driving vehicles carrying dangerous goods).

RE-HABILITATION AND RE-LICENSING OF EXISTING DRIVERS Re-habilitation of drivers: making existing drivers improve their skills and have an opportunity to re-train (to become more knowledgeable and more compliant to the new rules and safety regulations). Re-licensing: compulsory for drivers who have committed serious traffic offences (through the point system )

BETTER MAINTAINED VEHICLES Road accidents due to poor technical state of the vehicle (normally brakes or steering) can be as high as 30%. Technical inspections for vehicles (especially trucks and buses) mandatory in public or private inspection centers. Information campaigns. Putting a maximum age for the vehicles in order to be allowed to circulate (a more extreme action for private cars more common in buses and trucks). Better equipped vehicles, with safety equipment (e.g. seat belts and seat belt reminders, possibly automatic speed cuts, speed alerts, etc)

SMALL SCALE Infrastructures Improvements in alignment, signing, safety barriers etc in black spots Intersection improvement for better channelisation of traffic at level intersections Arrangements for safer pedestrian movement Installation or improvement of street lighting Other improvements for better traffic management especialy in urban areas

ENFORCEMENT Full compliance with the traffic law could reduce road accidents by 50%. Enforcement campaigns effective only as long as they are applied consistently and objectively. Penalties must be applied uniformly (i.e. to all offenders at all times) Enforcement of specific measures has different impacts on road safety according to the overall state of road safety culture and environment in a given country

ENFORCEMENT (Cont d) The following results can be stated on average for European countries (SUPREME project): Stationary speed enforcement (radar): -14% in fatal road accidents, and -6% in injuries. Patrolling along the highways: 4% in fatal accidents, and 16% in injuries. Drink driving enforcement: 9% in fatal and -7% in injuries. Seat belt enforcement: 6% in fatal and -8% in injuries. Reduction in blood alcohol limit: -8% in fatal and 4% in injuries.

ENFORCEMENT (Cont d) Enforcement of working and resting times for professional drivers, very important for road safety. Tachographs, electronic or conventional, mandatory. Inspection and enforcement by the Labour Inspectorates and / or the Police, but on a regular basis.

INSTITUTIONAL ORGANISATION OF ROAD SAFETY The trend in institutional Organization of Road Safety is towards: 1. inter-departmental road safety management and coordination. 2. developing and approving long term road safety plans to achieve quantifiable targets. Coordination can be achieved by a simple mechanism of a lean body such an interdepartmental committee or General Secretariat attached to the highest possible level of governmental authority

INSTITUTIONAL ORGANISATION OF ROAD SAFETY (Cont d) Example: Parliamentary Committee on Road Safety Inter-ministerial Committee on Road Safety Technical Secretariat Ministry of Transport Safety of the user & safe vehicles Ministry of Public Order Monitoring & policing Ministry of Public Works Safe road infrastructure Ministry of Health Post Accident Care Ministry of Education Traffic Education & Training Ministry of Interior Various Local Government Actions on Road Safety Ministry of Finance Ministry of Justice Other Ministries Non-governmental Organizations Research Institutions and Universities

INSTITUTIONAL ORGANISATION OF ROAD SAFETY (Cont d) Some simple recommendations: Establish a central multidisciplinary body responsible for road safety policy making, and formulation of long term action plans. Involve in the work of this body, as many different actors in road safety work as possible. Empower this body, as the leading agency for coordination between the various government departments as well as between local governmental and non-governmental organizations involved in road safety related work. Decentralize road safety implementation work Create road safety centres of excellence in various parts of the country, in order to: implement local solutions and adapt and materialise the central long term action plan. Create mechanism for data collection and statistics and analysis on road safety issues.

POST ACCIDENT CARE Create mechanisms (for incident detection and management) by which the victims of road accidents can be transported speedily to a hospital or health care unit, or in any way find the medical care they need Integrate road safety issues in the public health agenda. Other actions in: World report on road traffic injury prevention, World Health Organisation Geneva, 2004

THE NEED FOR A STRATEGIC ROAD SAFETY PLAN Road Safety Plans necessary in order to: Specify clearly laid out objectives for road safety over the respective time period, Specify the actions and measures at all levels of government and non-government Organisations, Give specific priorities, Plan the resources necessary in order to carry out road safety actions.

THE NEED FOR A STRATEGIC ROAD SAFETY PLAN (Cont d) Examples of strategic road safety actions (EU level): Creation of a European Road Safety Action Programme [1] (Vision Zero, etc) European Road Safety Charter [2], White Paper on Transport Policy [3], European Road Safety Observatory [4]. Continuously review and complete safety rules, strengthening the functioning of European safety agencies and gradually extending their safety-related tasks. [1] http://ec.europa.eu/transport/road/roadsafety/rsap/index_en.htm [2] http://ec.europa.eu/transport/roadsafety/charter/index_en.htm [3] European Commission White Paper European transport policy for 2010: Time to decide, 2001 and revision 2006. [4] http://www.erso.eu/

THE NEED FOR A STRATEGIC ROAD SAFETY PLAN (Cont d) Example of the new 5 year plan for Greece - 6 major areas of actions : I. Safety of the road user and safe vehicles (Ministry of Transport and Communications) II. Surveillance / enforcement of traffic Safety rules (Ministry of Interior) III. Safe road infrastructure (Ministry of Environment, Physical Planning and Public Works) IV. Post accident treatment (Ministry of Health) V. Traffic education and education on traffic safety (Ministry of Education and Religious Affairs) VI. Traffic safety actions and local authorities participation (Ministry of Interior, Public Administration and Decentralization)

CONCLUSIONS The creation of better conditions for road safety in a given country requires a well coordinated and longer term programme of actions adapted to the culture and socio-economic conditions of the country. Equal attention to both: hard actions (involving development of large scale infrastructures), as well as softer actions (involving building awareness and enforcing road safety behaviour, better and more efficient mechanisms for education and training, as well as monitoring, and post accident care. Countries while in the course of developing their road and road related infrastructures must take a very serious look at the soft measures and include them in their priority actions for road safety.