Skip to main content

New report lays out concrete steps toward safer roads

Countries can reduce deaths and injuries from road traffic crashes by flipping the traditional mobility hierarchy and adopting the Safe System approach. That is the finding of a new report from the Sustainable Mobility for All Initiative (SuM4All) presented at a press event of the ITF Summit held in Leipzig.
July 31, 2023 Read time: 4 mins

This approach acknowledges that people make errors and that the human body has a biomechanical threshold for kinetic energy, both of which need to be adapted by Safe System designers in order to minimise the severity of crashes. It advocates for several key steps towards safer roads: managing speeds more effectively, rethinking the design of streets and highways, leveraging vehicle technology, improving post-crash care, strengthening traffic law enforcement, reforming licensing systems, and promoting alternatives to private car use.

The new report from SuM4All, Enhancing Policy and Action for Safe Mobility provides practical guidance, case studies, and resources to help countries implement the Safe System approach. This is a pragmatic model that calls for a proactive and coordinated approach to road safety among all relevant stakeholders, with the objective of creating transport systems that are safer by nature and account for human error.

“The report rightly recognises that the overarching priority for the coming decade is to address the operational requirements of road safety delivery at national, subnational, and city levels. There is a pressing need for adequate financing and institutional strengthening efforts to support this," said Said Dahdah, head of the Global Road Safety Facility and Global Lead for Road Safety at the World Bank.  

At the global level, road safety remains a serious global health and development concern, with more than 1.35 million people killed and 50 million people injured on roads every year. Over 90% of road fatalities occur in low- and middle-income countries, which account for only 50% of the world’s vehicle fleet.

Broader adoption of the Safe System approach could go a long way in tackling the global road safety crisis. To make this happen, the new SuM4All report provides detailed recommendations on how the approach can be mainstreamed into road safety, sustainable mobility, and urban development.

“This work exemplifies the invaluable convening power of SuM4All and the impact that it can generate. Road safety needs more than ever coordinated approaches and hands-on guidance that can help drastically reduce deaths and injuries on our roads. In line with IRF’s mission and work aiming at enhancing partnerships to deliver better mobility systems for all, we have been delighted to coordinate this work. By flipping the hierarchy and putting people first, we are able to deliver not only safe but also more sustainable journeys to all," commented Susanna Zammataro, director general of the International Road Federation (IRF).

The report provides multiple entry points on how countries can implement a systemic and integrated approach to road safety in a way that will have positive spillover effects for other important dimensions of sustainable mobility, such as universal access, efficiency, and green mobility.

The main recommendations include: 

  • Embedding the Safe System approach to road safety into transport policies, strategies, and programmes at national, sub-national, and local levels to ensure alignment in design, regulatory and legislative instruments, and projects.  
  • Building capacity on the Safe System approach among decision-makers, government agencies, experts, and specialists in safe and sustainable mobility. 
  • Increasing awareness, public support, and value for implementing the Safe System approach by connecting and communicating the importance of road safety in climate action, individual and public health, and clarifying sustainable mobility.  

“Safety is at the heart of everything we do at Michelin. But beyond this, safe mobility is a global commitment for the Group. Michelin believes it has a responsibility to make mobility safer all over the world and is therefore involved in multiple collaborations with public and private-sector partners to meet the challenge. As a co-leader together with IRF of the SuM4All workstream, Michelin has experienced the power of dedicated stakeholders joining forces to streamline the multitude of bottom-up approaches and scattered projects, and to shape upstream a systemic framework and process, from high level statements to consistent safety action on the ground,” said Nicolas Beaumont, Senior VP Sustainable Development and Impact at Michelin during the launch of the report.

• More information and access to the report can be found at www.sum4all.org

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UN highlights safety pandemic on roads
    November 23, 2015
    Jean Todt, special envoy of UN secretary general on the challenge of road safety Jean Todt, president of, Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) and special envoy of the UN secretary general on road safety spoke about the next steps in tackling the plague of road accidents. “Every year, on the world's roads, almost 1.3 million people die. According to the WHO (World Health Organization), road traffic crashes are now the eighth leading cause of death globally, and the leading cause of death am
  • The IRF Road Safety Challenge aims to cut the rate of deaths and injuries for Africa
    May 15, 2015
    With the IRF Road Safety Challenge launched in Addis Ababa in early March, IRF reiterates its strong commitment towards making the recommendations for the Decade of Action a reality worldwide In its commitment to act as a catalyst in raising awareness and in promoting immediate practical actions, IRF has brought together Ministers from all over Africa under the auspices of the African Union, the World Bank and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA). An IRF Africa Chapter under the requ
  • Road Safety Audits for global roads
    October 24, 2019
    IRF Global Credential central to Senegal mission
  • 1st IRF Europe & Central Asia Regional Congress held on in Turkey
    November 18, 2015
    The International Road Federation (IRF) organised its first Regional Congress & Exhibition in Istanbul, Turkey on 15–18 September, 2015 The IRF is a non-governmental, not-for-profit membership organisation founded in Washington, DC in 1948 with the mission to encourage and promote development and maintenance of better, safer and more sustainable roads and road networks around the world.