Skip to main content

IDB, iRAP extend Latin America work

The five-year deal was signed during the recent Ten Steps to 2030 for Safer Road Infrastructure Side Event of the recent 4th Global Ministerial Conference on Road Safety underway in Marrakech, Morrocco.
By David Arminas February 25, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Esteban Diez Roux (left), operation senior advisor at the Inter-American Development Bank, and Miquel Nadal, director general of Cercle d’Economia and chair of iRAP (image courtesy iRAP)

Eliminating high-risk roads is the focus of a new five-year extension to an agreement between Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and International Road Assessment Programme (iRAP).

The agreement was signed by Greg Smith, iRAP’s acting chief executive, and Esteban Diez Roux, operation senior advisor at the IDB.

The five-year deal brings the organisations’ joint partnership for safer roads in Latin America and the Caribbean to 10 years. The agreement was inked during the Ten Steps to 2030 for Safer Road Infrastructure Side Event of the recent 4th Global Ministerial Conference on Road Safety underway in Marrakech, Morrocco.

The new five-year extension agreement will facilitate more collaboration between the IDB and iRAP to promote programmes and projects to significantly improve the safety of roads in Latin America and the Caribbean. As a registered charity in London, UK, iRAP works with organisations such as United Nations, World Health Organisation, governments, development banks, mobility clubs, industry and non-government road safety organisations was well as research organisations. It provides evidence-based tools, training and support to help make roads safe.

Experts from both IDB and iRAP will conduct road safety assessments, build local capacity and prioritise investments in safer infrastructure. It will also foster the sharing of information and best practices and promote the use of innovative tools and technologies to improve road safety outcomes.

According to iRAP’s Safety Insights Explorer, it is estimated that nearly 94,000 people were killed and more than five million were injured in road crashes in Latin America in 2021 - at a cost of US$223.4 billion.

(For more on the agreement and the work being done by iRAP and IDB, click here to read the feature on Global Highways)

Related Content

  • Sacyr and GMV do a cone deal in Spain
    January 26, 2024
    The Automatic Cone Machine Safe Signalling System – ACM3s – being developed by Sacyr Conservación will use GMV’s uPathWay solution in a leader-follower vehicle technology where a robotic arm on a trailer places and picks up highway safety cones.
  • Charging 'Roundtable' urges standardisation
    July 23, 2025
    A lack of standardisation for charging infrastructure is holding back the push towards the construction machine sector going electric. Now, a recently established “roundtable” of industry experts will investigate how to move forward.
  • Oman’s authorities commission road safety analysis
    December 5, 2012
    The authorities in Oman plan to improve road safety standards, a topic of key concern in the Gulf States. As part of this plan, the Royal Oman Police (ROP) has commissioned the Transport Research Laboratory (TRL) to carry out a comprehensive road safety research programme in the Sultanate of Oman. The multi-sector assessment will evaluate road safety performance and compare existing activities against best practice. These will be carried out across 12 different disciplines, including road safety managemen
  • ARTBA forming commission to address transport safety
    October 14, 2016
    The American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) is forming an independent commission to help implement the new, industry-developed “Safety Certification for Transportation Project Professionals (SCTPP) programme. The SCTPP Commission will be led by the chief executive officers of two of the largest transportation construction firms in the United States. Both are passionate safety advocates. David Walls, president & CEO of Austin Industries, based in Dallas, Texas, and Ross Myers, chairma