Skip to main content

European progress on road deaths is 'disappointing', says ETSC

Safety body suggests that the EU will miss target of halving fatalities by 2020
By Adam Hill June 18, 2020 Read time: 3 mins
ETSC says EU countries 'will need to step up a gear to hit the new targets for 2030' (© Antonio Nassa | Dreamstime.com)

The European Transport Safety Council (ETSC) has issued a solemn rebuke to the continent's efforts to cut road deaths since 2010.

Last year, 22,650 people lost their lives on EU roads - a 3% reduction compared to 2018.

But ETSC's latest analysis reveals that "progress across Europe has disappointed over the last nine years".

European Union countries achieved an overall reduction in road deaths of 24% from 2010-19 (2.7% on average per year).

Member states had agreed to try and cut road deaths by half in the decade to 2020 - but ETSC warns that, "with one year left until full data for 2020 are available, that target will almost certainly be missed".

A 6.7% year-on-year reduction would have been needed - and to reach it now requires a 34.5% drop, which "is out of reach".

Out of the 32 countries monitored by the ETSC, half reduced road deaths in 2019, with the best performers Luxembourg (39% decrease on 2018), Sweden (32%) and Estonia (22%).

Road deaths increased in 12 countries last year, while progress stagnated in four, ETSC found.

Taking the longer view, the Netherlands and UK - while both still seen as leaders in safety - saw more deaths on the road in 2019 than they did in 2010.

ETSC says that France, Sweden and Germany "have also shown disappointing progress over the last nine years with only modest reductions in deaths".  

Bulgaria and Romania remain towards the bottom of the pile in terms of road mortality "and have also made below-average reductions in recent years".

However, there were around 7,000 fewer road deaths in 2019 than there were in 2010 across the 27 EU states.

Antonio Avenoso, ETSC executive director, insisted it is not an entirely gloomy picture, saying that "some countries have been quietly undergoing a road safety revolution".  

Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, Greece and Portugal have made the most progress over the decade, with Estonia awarded the ETSC's Road Safety Performance Index award this year.

This Baltic state oversaw a 34.2% reduction in road deaths over the 2010-19 period - which is an annual average change in the number of road deaths of 6.6%.

It now has a level of road deaths per million inhabitants (39) which is comparable to the Dutch (38), a change that ETSC calls "a remarkable accomplishment and a reflection of significant investment and strategic leadership on road safety over several years".

Avenoso says that countries "will need to step up a gear to hit the new targets for 2030".

The coronavirus lockdown has created a mixed safety picture, but a modal shift to cycling and walking, combined with infrastructure changes and slower speed limits "may signal a way forward" in terms of impact on death and injury.

But Avenoso concludes: "If we just revert to business-as-usual after this crisis, the results could be even worse than before."

"There are danger signs already in the large numbers of speeding offences being reported as lockdowns are lifted, which only adds to the work of overstretched police and emergency services."


First published in www.itsinternational.com

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK equipment sales up 70% in first half year
    August 9, 2021
    Supply chain shortages and price rises for many products and materials remain an issue.
  • Wide variations in Europe's road safety figures
    May 14, 2012
    Road safety in Romania continues to be a major issue, with the country seeing more deaths in 2009 than in 2001. A study by the European Transport Safety Council (ETSC) shows that Romanian roads are eight times more dangerous than similar links in Sweden, which has Europe’s best record for road safety (see also Safety Report). Romania, along with Malta, has bucked a trend within Europe of reducing road accidents levels between 2001 and 2009 according to the report. However, while Malta’s road fatality rate
  • Europe’s drive for safer roads sets new targets
    January 9, 2019
    Europe’s drive for improved road safety will see new targets being set. Previous ambitious plans to reduce road casualty rates have not been achieved, so new strategies are being devised. The European Transport Safety Commission (ETSC) is setting out its latest plans. In 2010, the European Union renewed its commitment to improve road safety by setting a target of reducing road deaths by 50% by 2020, compared to 2010 levels. This target followed an earlier target set in 2001 to halve road deaths by 2010. A n
  • EU road fatalities fall by 11% in 2010
    February 28, 2012
    The European Commission has published new statistics showing that EU road fatalities decreased by 11 per cent in 2010.