Skip to main content

Road safety concerns for France and Portugal following increased crashes

There is concern in France and Portugal following the publication of data showing increases in road deaths. Both countries have been highly effective in recent years in reducing road deaths and injuries following campaigns to crack down on speeding and drink driving. The recent increases in deaths and injuries from road crashes have been of major concern as a result.
August 18, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
There is concern in France and Portugal following the publication of data showing increases in road deaths. Both countries have been highly effective in recent years in reducing road deaths and injuries following campaigns to crack down on speeding and drink driving. The recent increases in deaths and injuries from road crashes have been of major concern as a result.

In France a high-level ministerial committee will address the rise in road deaths. The interministerial committee for road safety (CISR) will be held at the end of the summer, tasked with finding solutions to reducing road deaths, which have risen by 3.5%. It will be the first time since 2011 that such a commission has met.

Meanwhile in Portugal, data for 2015 so far shows that road deaths are up nearly 10% on 2014. During the first seven months of this year, 277 people died in collisions on Portuguese roads, 25 more than the same period of 2014, according to the National Road Safety Authority (ANSR). Fatalities increased 9.9% over 2014 while collisions increased by 5.3%. There were a total of 68,845 collisions logged between January and July this year, up 3,472 on the first seven months of 2014. There was also a 5% increase in serious injuries over the period, with a 57 more people suffering injuries requiring long-term rehabilitation.

Related Content

  • Spanish road safety hits plateau
    January 7, 2016
    Strong measures in Spain have helped reduce the country’s road fatality rate enormously in recent years. Tougher enforcement of road rules commenced in 2004, with a notable drop in speeding and drink driving, resulting in a reduce rate of crashes. However a recent report from the Spanish motoring body RACC reveals that the figures have hit a plateau, with road fatalities for 2015 similar to those in 2014. This is the third consecutive year that Spain’s road fatality rates have remained broadly unchanged. Th
  • Polish road safety continues to improve
    January 16, 2014
    Official data from Poland shows a continued improvement in road safety. The data reveals that there were 5% fewer accidents, almost 8% fewer fatalities, a 5% decrease in injuries and a 5% reduction in drink-drivers. The information was made available recently through Pan-European police body TISPOL. According to TISPOL, the statistics confirm that police action can be effective in reducing vehicle crashes. Comparing the data for 2013 with statistics for 2012 and 2011 reveals a notable drop in road crashes,
  • Alcohol interlocks for vehicles could cut crashes in Europe?
    February 26, 2018
    There have been calls for mandatory alcohol interlocks in vans, lorries and buses across the EU. This follows the publishing of a new report which shows that more than 5000 deaths/year in the EU are still caused by drink-driving. As a result, member States have been asked to increase enforcement and introduce rehabilitation programmes for drink-driving offenders. The devices should be fitted in all new professional vehicles and also retrofitted to cars used by repeat drink-driving offenders, according to
  • Brazil’s dangerous roads see an increase in fatalities
    February 13, 2020
    Brazil’s poor road safety is under the spotlight, with an increase in fatal crashes.