Skip to main content

French automobile association produces road safety publication

The French Association d'Automobilists is about to release a publication detailing its plans to improve road safety in the country. Copies will be distributed to senior officials including those at the Ministry of the Interior and also the French the Prime Minister. The publication reveals that some 30% of deaths on the road are linked to drink driving. One plan to tackle this is to have police patrolling popular night spots and another is to carry out more roadside breath tests and catch drink drivers. Acc
November 8, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
The French Association d'Automobilists is about to release a publication detailing its plans to improve road safety in the country. Copies will be distributed to senior officials including those at the Ministry of the Interior and also the French the Prime Minister. The publication reveals that some 30% of deaths on the road are linked to drink driving. One plan to tackle this is to have police patrolling popular night spots and another is to carry out more roadside breath tests and catch drink drivers. According to the publication, this first measure could save 292 lives while the second could save up to 115 lives. Other proposed safety measures include painting white warning lines on secondary roads to help reduce casualties from drivers falling asleep at the wheel, which caused 984 deadly accidents in 2012. The publication calls for all vehicles to be fitted with hands-free phone technology as well as for major routes to feature stopping areas where drivers can pull over to use the phone or send text messages. To help reduce casualties amongst pedestrians the publication calls for vehicles to be fitted with visible stop lights at the front as well as blind spot mirrors. The association received more than 200 proposals for ways to reduce road deaths from its 4 million members during 2013.

Related Content

  • IBTTA launching Global Road Safety Week
    May 29, 2024
    IBTTA is launching the Global Road Safety Week.
  • Sounds on road safety
    May 30, 2019
    Listening to loud rock music while driving could have a negative effect on road safety. This is according to research carried out jointly by IAM RoadSmart and the magazine Auto Express. The research used a sophisticated driving simulator system. A test driver sat in the Base Performance Simulator while tackling a simulation of the Red Bull circuit in Austria. As the person drove, loud rock, classical, pop and hip-hop music was played. The trials included different driving scenarios with control at high spe
  • Presidio Parkway: the Golden Gate Bridge’s new southern approach road
    May 29, 2013
    Work on the Presidio Parkway, a new breathtaking and eco-friendly southern approach road to San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge, has entered its crucial second and final phase. As Guy Woodford reports, the vital US$1 billion project has overcome legal as well as environmental challenges to stay on course for its expected 2016 completion Just after 9pm on Friday April 27, 2012 a large public crowd looked on excitedly as a fleet of more than 40 R&L Brosamer and Ferma Corporation deployed hydraulic demolition h
  • Rebuilding the Human Dimension
    June 18, 2012
    We meet with Dr. Essam Sharaf, the former Prime Minister of Egypt, who has been honoured as IRF Personality of the Year for 2011 On 28 March, at a moving ceremony packed with IRF friends and delegates from all over the world, the IRF Personality of the Year Award for 2011 was formally presented to Dr. Essam Abdel-Aziz Sharaf. Discerned annually since 1951, the Award honours individuals universally acknowledged as having made particularly inspirational contributions to the fields of road infrastructure and