Skip to main content

Quiet cars causing concerns for pedestrians

Data from the UK reveals that quiet electric vehicles or hybrids operating in electric mode pose particular problems for pedestrians. A report has found that such vehicles are 40% more likely to be involved in a traffic incident involving a pedestrian than a conventional combustion-engined vehicle. The report adds that partially sighted or blind people face the highest risks, while children and older people are also at risk. This follows earlier research from Japan, highlighting the risks to pedestrians pos
March 30, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
RSSData from the UK reveals that quiet electric vehicles or hybrids operating in electric mode pose particular problems for pedestrians. A report has found that such vehicles are 40% more likely to be involved in a traffic incident involving a pedestrian than a conventional combustion-engined vehicle. The report adds that partially sighted or blind people face the highest risks, while children and older people are also at risk. This follows earlier research from Japan, highlighting the risks to pedestrians posed by electric and hybrid vehicles.

The automotive industry is already aware of the problem and a number of manufacturers are working on noise generation technology that could be fitted to the vehicles, in a bid to reduce the risk. The EU will require noise generation systems to be fitted to all electric vehicles or hybrids by 2021

EU rules say such generators must be fitted to quiet cars by 2021. However, blind and partially sighted people as well as the young or older people will still be at risk until the new rules come into force. Some groups concerned over the issue are calling for the requirement for sound generation technology to be brought forward and for the systems to be automatically switched on every time a vehicle is in motion.

Related Content

  • Black is green: the bitumen sector rises to the mobility challenge
    April 14, 2020
    Asphalt may be black most of the time, but the bitumen sector is green and getting greener, says Siobhan McKelvey, head of Eurobitume.
  • New technology will boost the efficiency for electric and hybrid cars
    November 6, 2012
    Innovations in technology are set to improve the efficiency of the next generation of electric and hybrid cars currently in development. Improvements in motors and drivetrains, along with new materials for batteries, will make major efficiency gains for future electric and hybrid cars. UK-based low carbon engine technology specialist, Controlled Power Technologies (CPT), says that one advance will come through a new 48V standard that has been put forward by major vehicle manufacturers. According to CPT this
  • Future funding crisis looms?
    August 13, 2012
    From the UK’s Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) comes data revealing a future funding crisis many governments will face. The IFS study, commissioned by the RAC Foundation, shows that income from motoring taxation will fall as traffic volumes increase. The problem is that increasing fuel efficiency of new generation vehicles, plus the introduction of electric cars, will deliver smaller and smaller returns on fuel taxation. Although fuel is taxed heavily in the UK, and right across Europe, projections show t
  • Distraction poses increasing risk to driving safety
    July 21, 2014
    In the UK a number of road safety campaigning groups are warning that driver distraction from mobile phones will become a bigger killer than drink driving by 2015. While cellphone use by drivers is banned in the UK, penalties are still light and enforcement lax. Drivers still frequently use cellphones while behind the wheel. Suggestions have been made to double the penalties facing offenders, but if this ruling is accepted it will still take time to implement. And some say these tougher penalties are still