Skip to main content

Odessa road safety campaign wins award

A road safety project carried out in the port city of Odessa has won a key award. The Prince Michael International Road Safety Award 2013 was presented by Prince Michael of Kent in St Petersburg. The project was financed by the European Union and was run between June and November 2011. Following the safety campaign, an analysis of data revealed a major improvement in road safety in the country. In 2010 the largest cause of road death was speeding, accounting for 36% of the fatalities. Also the wearing of se
May 22, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
From left to right: Alexei Goncharenko, deputy chairman of the Odessa Oblast Council; Oksana Romanukha, project coordinator; Prince Michael; Tony Pearce, project manager.
A road safety project carried out in the port city of Odessa has won a key award. The Prince Michael International Road Safety Award 2013 was presented by Prince Michael of Kent in St Petersburg. The project was financed by the 1116 European Union and was run between June and November 2011. Following the safety campaign, an analysis of data revealed a major improvement in road safety in the country.

In 2010 the largest cause of road death was speeding, accounting for 36% of the fatalities. Also the wearing of seat belts is very low, around 20% of front seat passengers. The data showed that young male drivers were most likely to speed and to not wear seatbelts. To tackle this issue, a campaign was developed by a local advertising agency using several Russian language social networks. This was supported by leaflets handed out at traffic junctions. A crucial role was played by the local police who focused strongly on enforcement of speeding violations. The social network campaign was run during June 2010, and in an area of 2.5 million people, there were 270,000 hits on the web page, 63% of which were young men. Speeding related injury accidents were down by 32% (year-on-year) in one month, while speeding offences dropped by over 32%.

The local police carried out large counts of seat belt wearing at the beginning and the end of the campaign. During the two months of the second campaign seat belt wearing increased from just over 20% to just under 40%. In the following months following the campaign in June the project monitored the continuing effect on road deaths from speeding, and until the end of 2011, the year on year reduction in road deaths in Odessa was double the national average.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Fugro uses Traffic Speed Deflectometer scans for Highways England
    November 14, 2016
    Fugro has started scanning structural pavement condition data from lane 2 using Highways England’s Traffic Speed Deflectometer (TSD). This is the first time for such scanning as part of the routine network-wide survey of England’s strategic roads, according to Fugro. The global asset integrity specialist has been carrying out Traffic Speed Structural Surveys (TRASS) since autumn 2014 under a 3-year contract (TRASS 3) - Highways England’s largest ever outsourced contract for pavement structural condit
  • Smart road test facility in Virginia
    July 28, 2015
    A test stretch of road in the US is playing a valuable role in developing technology and boosting traffic safety -*Tom Gibson writes Located a short distance from the Virginia Tech campus in the mountains of rural southwest Virginia in the mid-Atlantic region of United States, the Virginia Smart Road looks like a conventional road. But venturing to either end of the 3.5km-long thoroughfare reveals that it actually goes nowhere, at least for now. The result of a plan conceived back in the 1980s, the Vi
  • Seoul street sitters disrupt traffic all because of a dare
    March 18, 2015
    Traffic on an eight-lane road through one of Seoul’s wealthiest districts was disrupted for half an hour by two men sitting in chairs in the middle of the road. It wasn’t a political protest but reportedly a dare agreed by the men, in their 20s, to see who could last the longest sitting in the road, the fashionable Gangnam Avenue. The two men were sitting in the road for half an hour before police arrived to arrest them, Korean media reported. A witness apparently said they didn’t appear afraid of getting h
  • European transport pricing deadline
    September 3, 2012
    Public consultation is nearing completion on the sensitive issue of internalising external costs to make transport users pay for the perceived negative effects they inflict on society, including air pollution, CO2 emissions, accidents and congestion. Within six months a universal model will be unveiled by the European Commission (EC).