Skip to main content

Need for defined work zone safety regulations

Christophe Nicodème, ERF's Director General, explores a missing link in the road safety chain Road works are an essential part of the work of public administrations and toll operators; aimed at preserving a safe road infrastructure for users, while minimising the disruption caused as a result of unavoidable traffic interventions. Given the essential role of road works, one would assume that well-defined regulations exist at national and European level to determine the best way of conducting them. Yet
April 12, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Besides congestion, typical work zones can cause dangerous confusion, putting both drivers and workers at risk

Christophe Nicodème, ERF's Director General, explores a missing link in the road safety chain

Road works are an essential part of the work of public administrations and toll operators; aimed at preserving a safe road infrastructure for users, while minimising the disruption caused as a result of unavoidable traffic interventions.

Given the essential role of road works, one would assume that well-defined regulations exist at national and European level to determine the best way of conducting them.

Yet, in reality, this is one of the least regulated fields of the road sector. At national level, regulations tend to be rather vague and, in most cases, road works are awarded essentially on the basis of the cheapest offer rather than with due regard to an optimal safety/mobility scenario. This absence of clear rules at national level has made any thought of harmonisation at European level practically impossible.

As a result, work sites are characterised by high accident frequencies that place both drivers and workers at risk. By way of indication, the Dutch Institute for Road Safety Research (SWOV) has highlighted that 2% of all fatal accidents in the Netherlands occur in work zones.

Meanwhile, in the USA, 667 people were killed in work zones during 2009 alone!

In 2007, 1202 European Road Federation published a position paper entitled 'Safety on Motorway Work Zones - Works in Progress' (available for download from ERF website) that sought to identify some key parameters for ensuring a safer environment during maintenance operations.

In this respect, ERF notably called for better integration of safety parameters in public procurement procedures; better use of passive safety devices as a means of avoiding accidents and promoting a seamless flow of traffic; better signs and road markings to guide drivers entering, driving through and exiting work zones; and better awareness raising campaigns to highlight the dangers among road users and impress the need for greater enforcement.

The issue was revisited during the 16th 2462 IRF World Meeting in Lisbon [in 2010], where stakeholders gathered for a dedicated roundtable to discuss progress to date and the challenges that remain. The message that emerged was unequivocal: a lot more needs to be done in this field if we hope to achieve greater safety and mobility around work zones.

It is against this backdrop, and following consultations with ERF members, that I decided to launch a new Working Group on Work Zone Safety, which held its first meeting on 9 March, 2011 at the ERF offices in Brussels, Belgium.

Open to ERF members and external participants, the working group's initial objectives will be to examine the different requirements and solutions for work zones in terms of safety, mobility and the environment - as well as to perform a comparative analysis of existing norms at EU Member State level with a view to identifying best practices and examining the scope for greater harmonisation and standardisation.

I take this opportunity to extend a personal invitation to all stakeholders that have an interest in the field, and who would like to participate in this new Working Group, to contact the ERF Secretariat.

At the end of the day, the success of the Working Group will largely be determined by the breadth of its expertise, as well as the willingness of industry partners to implement its findings in collaboration with the relevant authorities.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • 16th IRF World Meeting
    February 14, 2012
    International Road Community Rises to the Challenge of Safe, Smart and Sustainable Mobility. Songs are like roads - highways to the heart - opening new vistas, new challenges and new opportunities." Singer, Mafalda Arnault's words during a splendidly moving opening ceremony were an apt introduction to the spirit and achievements of what proved a highly successful 16th IRF World Meeting in Lisbon. A capacity audience clapping in unison to the soulful sounds of Fado was symbolic of an industry showing it can
  • ERF urges greater maintenance of Europe’s road signs to save lives
    March 21, 2016
    ERF has launched a position paper to advocate better maintenance of Europe’s traffic signs. Vertical signage is an essential element not only of a modern and well-maintained road infrastructure, but also of a safe and functional road network. Road signs help regulate traffic, provide crucial visual guidance and give drivers important preview especially during night-time conditions. Well maintained and efficient signage becomes even more necessary when taking into account the ageing population of Europe, in
  • ERF and AVTODOR cement safety cooperation to cut casualty toll
    January 9, 2015
    One of the ERF’s principal tasks to is act as a platform for sharing best practice between countries in the field of road safety. While this activity has traditionally been handled at the European Union level, the current gloomy economic environment within Europe has forced the ERF to rethink its mandate and make the promotion of expertise a priority It is in this context that the ERF, in cooperation with the state company Russian Highways - AVTODOR - joined forces to organise a landmark event in the fie
  • Road transport must evolve in line with users’ needs
    April 12, 2012
    At its annual plenary meeting held on 25 May 2010, during the 16th IRF World Meeting in Lisbon, the European Road Federation (ERF) elected a new President in the person of Jacobo Díaz Pineda. Mr. Díaz Pineda has been the Director General of the Spanish Road Association (AEC) since September 2006, and is also President of the Ibero-American Road Institute (IVIA). We took advantage of his presence in Lisbon to ask him a few questions about his new responsibilities: