Skip to main content

UK road deaths increasing for 2016

Worrying figures have been revealed regarding the UK’s road casualty rate for the last 12 months year ending on June 2016. There were 1,800 reported road fatalities during this period, a 2% increase from the 1,770 recorded for the previous year. However, this increase may come from a combination of factors that have come about by chance, rather than any specific change. The killed or seriously injured casualties (KSIs) increased by 3% to 24,620 compared with the year ending June 2015. This change is s
November 3, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
Worrying figures have been revealed regarding the UK’s road casualty rate for the last 12 months year ending on June 2016. There were 1,800 reported road fatalities during this period, a 2% increase from the 1,770 recorded for the previous year.

However, this increase may come from a combination of factors that have come about by chance, rather than any specific change.

The killed or seriously injured casualties (KSIs) increased by 3% to 24,620 compared with the year ending June 2015. This change is statistically significant as the number of serious injuries has increased by a greater number than the fatalities. This suggests that different factors could be affecting each of the types of severities. One partial explanation, though, could be in changes in reporting practices leading to casualties who would have formerly been classified as slight injuries being reclassified as serious injuries.

On a positive note, the total number of casualties decreased by 2% to 185,010 and this change is statistically significant. It suggests that the decrease is a reflection of genuine changes in road safety rather than natural variation, although, it could also partly reflect changes in reporting practices.

Of interest is that motor vehicle traffic increased by 1.5% over the same period. Between April and June 2016, 450 people were killed in reported road crashes, a 7 increase from 420 in the same quarter of 2015. And KSI casualties increased by 2% to 6,080 over the same period.

Casualties of all severities decreased by 3% to 44,250 in comparison with the same quarter in 2015. But quarterly casualty figures are prone to fluctuation as they are strongly affected by external factors such as the weather. So the changes in quarterly casualty figures in this release should be interpreted with caution.

Motor traffic levels increased by 1% over the same period. In the year ending June 2016, fatalities increased by 2% and traffic levels rose by 1.5% compared with the previous year. As a result, the fatality rate/billion vehicle miles increased slightly by 0.2%. But total casualties decreased by around 2% over the same period. When combined with the rising traffic volume the overall casualty rate/billion vehicle miles decreased by 4% in the year ending June 2016. In comparison with the second quarter of 2015, fatalities increased by 7%, KSIs by 2% and overall casualties decreased by 3% in the period April to June 2016. Over the same period, traffic levels increased by 1%. As a result, the fatality rate/billion vehicle miles increased by 6%. The overall casualty rate fell by 4% over the same period.

There was a decrease in KSI casualties for pedal cyclists and motorcyclists in the year ending June 2016, but an increase in pedestrian and car occupant KSIs.  Pedal cyclist KSIs fell by 3% to 3,350 and motorcyclist KSIs by 1% to 5,420 in the year ending June 2016. But pedestrian KSIs increased by 3% to 5,440 and car occupant KSIs by 9% to 9,290 in the year ending June 2016.

There were 1,950 child (aged 0-15) KSI casualties in the year ending June 2016, unchanged from the year ending June 2015. Child pedestrian KSIs decreased by 4% to 1,240. Child casualties of all severities decreased by 0.4% compared with the previous year to 15,980.

Related Content

  • Australia’s road safety crisis as crashes increase
    December 22, 2016
    Increases in the numbers of road crashes and road deaths are giving cause for concern in Australia. The gain in the country’s road fatality rate is of note as it comes after a 40 year period in which those killed or seriously injured (KSI) have been reducing. Certain sections of the country’s road network have been identified as being of particular risk to drivers, with moves in hand to improve safety. The Australian Automobile Association has revealed that there were 15,339 crashes in the country that resu
  • UK road death statistics figures show no reduction
    September 27, 2018
    IAM RoadSmart, the UK’s biggest independent road safety charity, said it is concerned by lack of progress in road deaths – and calls for a new focus on driver behaviour. Although cars are getting safer and there has been a step change in new road investment, careless human behaviour and increasing traffic levels are cancelling this out, according to the charity. The UK’s Department of Transport announced this week that there were 1,793 reported road deaths in 2017 - an increase of one on 2016. T
  • Netherlands road safety problem as casualties rise
    May 5, 2017
    Serious issues have been realised in the Netherlands, with an increase in the rate of road casualties. There were 629 road deaths in the Netherlands in 2016, eight more than in 2015. Meanwhile 2015 had seen an increase of 51 road deaths over 2014. The issue is of concern as these two years were the first since 1996 when road deaths had not dropped. The road safety standards in the Netherlands are amongst the best in Europe, and the entire world. However there is concern that in the Netherlands, as in many c
  • Safety gains on Europe’s roads with lower KSI rates
    February 19, 2014
    Better road safety is helping to cut KSI rates right across the EC - Mike Woof writes Road safety continues to improve in Europe, with official statistics for 2012 showing a drop in fatalities of 2,661 compared with the figures for 2011. The latest data from Pan-European police body TISPOL shows an encouraging trend towards better road safety. This highlights safety improvements right across the EU. In 2012, a total of 27,700 people were killed in road crashes in the European Union’s 27 member states, eq