Skip to main content

Safer vehicles to cut crashes in Brazil

Brazil’s road death rate could be reduced with safer vehicles. This has been highlighted by a new research report from the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory (TRL). The report has revealed that 34,000 Brazilian lives could be saved and 350,000 serious injuries prevented by 2030, if UN vehicle safety regulations were adopted and car manufacturers sought to achieve higher ratings in the Latin NCAP crash test programme.
November 16, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
Brazil’s road death rate could be reduced with safer vehicles.

This has been highlighted by a new research report from the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory (777 TRL). The report has revealed that 34,000 Brazilian lives could be saved and 350,000 serious injuries prevented by 2030, if UN vehicle safety regulations were adopted and car manufacturers sought to achieve higher ratings in the Latin NCAP crash test programme.

The independent study was commissioned by Global NCAP and highlights the gap between the regulated vehicle safety standards in the industrialised regions and Brazil. TRL’s findings closely align with the policy recommendations set out by the World Health Organisation (WHO) in its recent Global Status Report on Road Safety.

The new study concludes that Brazil “has started to introduce vehicle safety legislation and Latin NCAP is raising awareness about the importance of car safety and creating consumer based competition to motivate improvements”. However, “to help create an automotive market in Brazil that provides adequate levels of safety, further development of the minimum regulatory standards is required.”

Brazil has clearly made road safety a priority, and supporting much needed legislation will enable them to reach their road safety goals even faster. The report identifies clear regulatory priorities for Brazil including “the need to introduce a side impact crashworthiness test and to mandate for Electronic Stability Control (ESC) to be fitted to every new passenger car.”

The report also sets out a timetable for the adoption of these priorities which “are internationally proven to be cost effective countermeasures that save lives” and that there are clearly “established UN Regulations available to apply now.”

Side impacts are one of the most common collision types which result in car user fatalities and serious injuries. UN Regulation No 95 on lateral collision protection defines a test procedure and performance requirements for a simulated impact of another car into the side of the tested vehicle at 50km/h. The test procedure is well understood by the automotive industry and the engineering knowledge and technology is very mature and cost effective to apply.

Electronic Stability Control (ESC) helps keep a vehicle on course in critical situations such as swerving to avoid an obstacle. It detects understeer or oversteer and counters it by applying the brakes to individual wheels. ESC reduces loss-of-control accidents, such as run-off-road collisions and rollovers, and is known as one of the most effective primary safety systems. It was first introduced on the market in 1995 and became mandatory in the EU in 2011 for new models and in 2014 for all cars.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cutting road deaths around the world
    February 27, 2020
    A new funding source will help cut road deaths around the world.
  • Cutting speed to cut crashes and boost safety
    February 10, 2021
    Cutting speed can help cut crashes and boost safety.
  • Speed limiters will limit fatalities, says the TRL
    July 29, 2019
    The soon-to-be mandatory speed limiters on vehicles in the European Union will make all safety other features more efficient, according the UK-based Transport Research Laboratory. In March the European Parliament passed a law that safety features such as intelligent speed assistance and advanced emergency-braking system must be installed in new vehicles from May 2022. They form part of the EU’s new suite of safety measures. TRL, which provided input for the European Commission regarding the formulatio
  • UN Summit launches Urban Electric Mobility Initiative to force leading cities into electric vehicles by 2030
    October 1, 2014
    The New York United Nations Climate Summit has prioritised four global transport initiatives as part of the eight actions areas that the summit has named as “critical for keeping global temperature increases to less than two degrees Celsius,” and the Urban Electric Mobility Initiative (UEMI) has taken centre stage. UEMI wants cities with a specific target to ensure that electric vehicles make up 30% of their total urban vehicle population by 2030 at the latest. Joan Clos, UN-Habitat Executive Director us