Skip to main content

Vietnam’s road safey shows continued improvement

Road safety in Vietnam is showing continued signs of improvement, a major step forward in Asia where road crashes are a serious problem. Across most of Asia, road deaths are increasing as vehicle ownership grows but Vietnam is bucking the trend and lowering the annual death toll. The latest data from Vietnam’s National Committee for Traffic Safety reveals that traffic deaths, crashes and injuries were all reduce in the period from January to July 2017.
August 1, 2017 Read time: 1 min

Road safety in Vietnam is showing continued signs of improvement, a major step forward in Asia where road crashes are a serious problem. Across most of Asia, road deaths are increasing as vehicle ownership grows but Vietnam is bucking the trend and lowering the annual death toll. The latest data from Vietnam’s National Committee for Traffic Safety reveals that traffic deaths, crashes and injuries were all reduce in the period from January to July 2017.

Traffic crashes in the seven months from the beginning of the year to July 2017 stood at 11,172. This represented a drop of 5.7%. Meanwhile the number of injuries dropped to 9,236, a decrease of 10.2%. There were 4,644 road deaths in this period.

In the period from 16 June to 15 July 2017, there were 1,579 traffic crashes, a drop of 2.8%. Meanwhile there were 627 deaths, a drop of 5.1% compared to the same period in the previous year.

Related Content

  • High percentage of DUI deaths in Catalonia, Spain
    May 9, 2016
    Official figures from Catalonia in Spain show a high percentage of road fatalities relate to driving under the influence of drink or drugs. According to the Legal Medicines Institute in Catalonia, post mortem tests showed positive for drink or drugs in 45% of road accident deaths in the region.
  • Volvo CE has maintained profitability for 2024
    January 31, 2025
    Volvo CE has maintained strong profitability for 2024
  • Poland developing road safety strategy
    May 22, 2013
    The authorities in Poland are working on a road safety strategy intended to tackle the country’s high level of fatalities and injuries from traffic crashes. Improvements in safety levels are being seen with a decline in the fatality rate and in 2012, 3,600 people were killed representing a drop of 22.3% from the previous year. The first quarter of 2013 saw an 18.1% drop in road crashes, a 25.4% fall in fatalities and an 18.4% reduction in injuries compared with statistics available for the same period in 20
  • New data reveals the latest crash statistics from Italian and Swiss roads
    March 26, 2013
    Official data from Italy and Switzerland reveals changing patterns for fatal crash statistics. The information from Switzerland shows an increase in fatalities on the country’s roads during 2012. The latest set of figures reveals that 339 people lost their lives on Switzerland's roads in 2012, 19 more than in 2011. During 2012 4,202 people were seriously injured in road crashes, although this was 235 fewer than in 2011, according to the Federal office for roads (OFROU). In all 2012 saw a total of 18,148 roa