Skip to main content

Improving conspicuity and safety for India’s cyclists

IRF’s India Chapter launches major drive to promote the conspicuity of cyclists Road accident deaths in India are among the highest in the world. Cyclists constitute a particularly vulnerable category of road users with more than 6,800 estimated to have lost their lives on the country’s roads in 2011 alone. A large proportion of the fatalities can be attributed to nothing more than the fact that cyclists are not always sufficiently conspicuous to other road users. To address this tragic state of aff
March 13, 2014 Read time: 3 mins
Cyclists in the Indian capital Delhi queued to have high visibility markings attached to their bicycles in a move coordinated by IRF, 3M, Avery Dennison and the Delhi Traffic Police
IRF’s India Chapter launches major drive to promote the conspicuity of cyclists

Road accident deaths in India are among the highest in the world. Cyclists constitute a particularly vulnerable category of road users with more than 6,800 estimated to have lost their lives on the country’s roads in 2011 alone. A large proportion of the fatalities can be attributed to nothing more than the fact that cyclists are not always sufficiently conspicuous to other road users.

To address this tragic state of affairs, and the major social trauma and costs arising from it, IRF has launched - at the instigation of 1201 IRF Geneva chairman, Kiran K Kapila and NK Sinha, chair of the India Chapter - a major campaign to equip bicycles with reflective tape designed to enhance their visibility, particularly in low light and night-time conditions.
The campaign, which is being conducted in close consultation and cooperation with the 1143 Ministry of Road Transport and Highways and the Traffic Police – with the support of IRF member company 152 3M and Avery Dennison- has been initiated in Delhi. A target of one million bicycles to be fitted at zero cost to the end-users has been set for the city and the programme is currently being implemented in 57 strategic locations in accordance with a five-phase plan.

Already, in the Western zone of the city, some 50,000 bicycles have been fitted with 3M and 1540 Avery Dennison retro-reflective tape and the campaign has generated auspicious interest and awareness among cyclists throughout the city, who are coming forth in large numbers to benefit from IRF India Chapter’s project.

It is now planned gradually to extend the campaign, first to other metropolitan and urban areas and then to key non-urban areas. Through this simple but highly effective road safety initiative, IRF India Chapter aims drastically to reduce the death toll among vulnerable road users on India’s roads.

Bearing in mind the preponderance of two-wheelers and mixed traffic conditions in many low and middle-income countries, the programme also carries significant potential for replication in other parts of the sub-continent and beyond. Indeed, the Global Road Safety Partnership (GRSP) has estimated that there are some 800 million bicycles in the world, twice the number of cars: “In Asia alone, bicycles currently carry more people than all the world’s cars. Nevertheless, in many countries, bicycle injuries are not given proper recognition as part of the road safety problem and attract little research.”


For more information, contact: %$Linker: 2 Email <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkEmail [email protected] email: [email protected] false mailto:[email protected] true false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Directive on road infrastructure safety management – to improve mobility safely
    September 12, 2018
    Better signs and more compliance leads to safer roads, says Christophe Nicodème, director general of the European Union Road Federation in the first of a regular new series of columns from ERF The Third Mobility Package launched by the European Commission represents the final piece of the “Europe on the Move Agenda” towards a modernisation of transport policy adapting to new decarbonisation and digitisation commitments. The package is composed of elements impacting various transport elements, among which
  • Regional seminar on performance based contract for road, Arusha, Tanzania July 2016
    May 19, 2016
    Without timely and proper maintenance, the condition and value of road networks, and the benefits from investing in these road networks, deteriorate, diminish, and become smaller. In much of Africa, the condition of the road networks leaves much to be desired. The IRF Geneva is coming together with the Tanzanian Ministry of Works, Transport and Communications, the Tanzania National Roads Agency (TANROADS), the Tanzanian Roads Fund Board, Tanzanian Road Association (TARA), the Tanzania Transportation Tec
  • IRF senior executives professional development 2012
    March 15, 2012
    Register today for one of the world’s foremost continuing professional development programmes tailored to the needs of senior road professionals. Organised by the University of Birmingham (UK) in association with IRF Geneva, the Senior Road Executives (SRE) Programme has established an international reputation as an essential ‘must attend’ annual event for senior road professionals from across the world.
  • VIDEO: Kangaroo takes out cyclist down under
    July 25, 2016
    It caught all the cyclists by surprise when a young bounding kangaroo decided to hurl itself at the peloton during a bicycle race in Australia. A fellow racer trailing behind took the video. The targeted cyclist was severely bruised from hitting the deck and he needed stitches. But the marauding kangaroo apparently died from its injuries when it slammed into the bike at a right angle. Cyclists being taken out by kangaroos is more common than most non-Australians would think. Click here to see one cycl