Skip to main content

Road safety collaboration

A road safety collaboration will cut road crash casualties in Asia.
By MJ Woof July 9, 2025 Read time: 3 mins
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan will benefit from improved road safety following a new collaboration between UNESCAP, iRAP, EASST and the IRF – image courtesy of © Masar1920| Dreamstime.com

 

A new collaboration for road safety is expected to deliver reduced crashes and casualties in parts of Asia. A new collaboration between UNESCAP, iRAP, EASST and the International Road Federation (IRF) is reviewing and improving local road geometrical design standards for safer and more inclusive roads across Central Asia. This has been achieved with a workshop in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. The event also marked the launch of a new suite of road safety design guidance for road infrastructure designers across Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. 

The new resource package includes a full project report of approach and methodology, including details of existing GOST-SNiP design standards in each country. It provides the results of iRAP star rating assessments at standard cross sections in the region. 

Tailored road safety design guidance, based on international best practice, will be implemented in Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. 

The guidance has been developed in close cooperation with national stakeholders and with input from the Asian Development Bank (ADB), European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and European Investment Bank (EIB) – with financial support provided by the United Nations Road Safety Fund (UNRSF). The aim of these resources is not to replace existing standards but to supplement them and offer valuable guidance to road engineers and other stakeholders on how to incorporate evidence-based safety measures derived from international best practice into future road projects.  

In particular, the guidance emphasises the importance of early intervention into the project planning process, especially during feasibility studies, to reduce the risks that can lead to serious crashes, injuries, and deaths. It promotes a Safe System Approach, which recognises that road users, as human beings, can make mistakes, and that those mistakes should not cost lives or result in serious injury. The approach calls for road design that mitigates risk, especially for vulnerable road users such as pedestrians, cyclists, and children. 

Safe road design is not only lifesaving but also cost-effective. It helps to avoid the economic losses incurred by countries due to road crashes with early intervention also serving as a mechanism to avoid costly mistakes in the road development process. The guidance for each country covers key areas including: a review of existing national standards; practical design solutions based on road safety design principles such as lower speeds and forgiving infrastructure; detailed guidance on specific design elements and the role they play in mitigating risk; and why consultation and stakeholder engagement is a vital part of the design process.  

By implementing and updating national road design standards in line with international standards such as the UN Global Plan for the Decade of Action for Road Safety 2021-2030 and CAREC’s Safely Connected: A Regional Road Safety Strategy, our aim is to minimise road traffic fatalities and injuries through safer road infrastructure. And we hope that the pilots in Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan that have been a focus of this project will scale up to have CAREC-wide implications.  

 

Related Content

  • Road safety insights from iRAP
    August 5, 2024
    Road safety insights are now available from iRAP.
  • Tanzania’s new road safety programme launched
    October 6, 2022
    Tanzania has launched a new road safety programme.
  • Implementing road safety initiatives
    July 13, 2012
    Blair Turner examines infrastructure options for achieving Safe System outcomes and their implementation in Australia Like a number of other developed countries around the world, Australia has recently adopted a 'Safe System' approach to addressing road safety. This approach, which stems from Sweden's Vision Zero and Sustainable Safety in the Netherlands, recognises that humans as road users are fallible and will make mistakes. There are also limits to the kinetic energy exchange that humans can tolerate (
  • Safe Roads Safe Kids Project: delivering a safe journey to school
    October 15, 2018
    Every year 186,300 children die from road traffic crashes around the world. That is more than 500 children every day. Road traffic injury ranks among the top four causes of death for all children over the age of five years. According to data reported by the Moroccan Comité national de prévention des accidents de la circulation (CNPAC), young people below the age of 14 represent 15% of all the deaths on Moroccan roads and the majority of these are pedestrians. Many of these fatalities are amongst children