Skip to main content

FIA president Todt sees safety at stake

Jean Todt, president of FIA - Federation Internationale de l’Automobile – warned that only a more joined-up and innovative approach to improving Europe’s roads will work. The safety of all who travel on roads is at stake, said Todt, who helped guide the red Ferrari Formula One team to several championship titles. He is also the United Nations special envoy for road safety. Speaking at the congress’ opening ceremony, PIARC (World Road Association) president-elect Claude Van Rooten agreed with Todt, saying th
February 9, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Jean Todt, president of FIA - Federation Internationale de l’Automobile – warned that only a more joined-up and innovative approach to improving Europe’s roads will work. The safety of all who travel on roads is at stake, said Todt, who helped guide the red Ferrari Formula One team to several championship titles. He is also the United Nations special envoy for road safety. Speaking at the congress’ opening ceremony, PIARC (World Road Association) president-elect Claude Van Rooten agreed with Todt, saying that new thinking on public-private initiatives are needed.

Rooten said that one of the congress’ objectives was to explore ways to ensure that authorities, designers and contractors cooperate to make optimal use of public resources and obtain value for money. Practical solutions will be needed to achieve the ambitious target of a 50% cut in road fatalities. The event’s 500 delegates were presented with a series of papers on adapting Europe’s current road infrastructure to the way in which “technological changes and innovations in vehicle technology, road usage and road infrastructure [will change] the road of the future”.

The region need to “examine the challenges posed by road automation for the road infrastructure sector and the role of roads in the future European socio-economic model” Rooten concluded.

Related Content

  • Australia roads alliance
    April 16, 2012
    A huge infrastructure programme is being planned at present for the Australian state of Queensland With an annual growth rate of around 3.2%, Queensland is the fastest growing state in Australia and has been for over a decade. The State attracts an average of 1,500 new permanent residents each week, 1,000 of whom move to the South East corner.
  • Top US industry figure welcomes movement on highway bill
    March 19, 2012
    A senior US construction association figure has praised congressional leaders for breaking the “logjam” over the introduction of a highway bill to generate jobs and improve transport infrastructure.
  • Key IRF event for Middle East
    March 2, 2012
    The International Road Federation's event in the Gulf & Middle East Region in the capital of the Kingdom of Bahrain comes amid calls for efforts to meet the challenges posed by the region's growing demand for mobility and movement of goods.
  • IRF World Congress 2024: Christian U. Haas of Umovity interview ahead of the Congress
    October 1, 2024
    With its combination of software, hardware and services, Umovity accelerates end-to-end traffic planning and management globally. Christian U. Haas, chief executive of Umovity, recently spoke to the IRF ahead of the IRF World Congress to be held this month in Istanbul, on the challenges and opportunities facing the mobility sector.