European Day Without A Road Death: ‘Everyone’s vulnerable’
This year’s European Day Without A Road Death (Project EDWARD) takes place today, emphasising a theme of vulnerability. It is organised by the European Traffic Police Network (TISPOL), which offers a somewhat pessimistic view of the state of play. “We have spent time reflecting on recent results which paint a very mixed picture of progress in reducing deaths and serious injuries on Europe’s roads,” TISPOL says in a statement. “For the first few years of this decade, countries across the EU have been highly
September 25, 2019
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This year’s European Day Without A Road Death (Project EDWARD) takes place today, emphasising a theme of vulnerability. It is organised by the European Traffic Police Network (4753 TISPOL), which offers a somewhat pessimistic view of the state of play. “We have spent time reflecting on recent results which paint a very mixed picture of progress in reducing deaths and serious injuries on Europe’s roads,” TISPOL says in a statement. “For the first few years of this decade, countries across the EU have been highly successful in pursuing the 2020 50% reduction target. But the arrival of a second successive year of disappointing news shows that this downward trend has stagnated.”
On average, 70 people per day are killed on Europe’s roads, and TISPOL says: “Driver behaviour remains the most important barrier to progress as we approach 2020 and its reduction targets.”
The organisation continues: “This year we stress the notion that we are all more vulnerable than we think we are. The word vulnerable probably leads us initially to picture children crossing the road, cyclists in traffic, motorcyclists as well… but we are all at risk. So today let’s all reflect on the risks we face and the risks we pose to others.”
The %$Linker: 2External<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary />000link-external campaignfalsehttp://www.projectedward.eu/falsefalse%>, which won a major safety %$Linker: 2External<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary />000link-external awardfalsehttps://www.itsinternational.com/sections/general/features/international-road-safety-awards-the-winners/falsefalse%> this year, was started in 2016. The organisers insist that awareness-raising “offers us the opportunity to put road safety high on the agenda – not just amongst ourselves who live and breathe it every day, but much further and wider as we reach out to everyone who uses the roads”.
Animal welfare groups in the Republic of Ireland are angry over the apparent insensitive act by a road making contractor who painted a yellow line over a dead cat on the side of the highway.
A report by Irish newspapers quoted one person saying it was “shameful” and “nobody cared enough to move this poor cat who had been killed by a car and the line was painted over it”.
The International Road Federation (IRF) is calling for presentations on road safety for events in Saudi Arabia and Washington DC. These presentations should be on Roadside Safety, Work Zone Safety and Vulnerable User Safety. They will be made at the IRF Middle East Regional Congress in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia from December 15th to December 17th, 2015.
A key event is being planned for Europe’s asphalt industry. The European Asphalt Pavement Association (EAPA) will hold the 1st EAPA Workshop on the Use of Rejuvenators in Asphalt Mixtures on the 10th and 11th September 2019. The workshop will be held in the Italian city of Padova at the Caffe Padrocchi (Rossini room) - Via VIII febbraio, n. 15 - 35122 Padova.
It will take place in the afternoon of 10th September 2019 and the morning of 11th September, followed by the 5th International ISAP Symposium on A
The provisional programme is now available for this year’s Euroasphalt and Eurobitume Event in Berlin. June 14-15.
The focus of E&E 2018 will be on the preparations needed by the asphalt industry to ensure that it is fit for purpose in the future.
Important strategic issues will be explored, some of which were highlighted in the E&E Congress 2016. These include the increasingly stringent economic aspects of supply and demand, the growing environmental issues over highway construction and use, health