Skip to main content

Evonik hosts awards ceremony in Thailand

Evonik Industries recently hosted an award ceremony at the Residence of the German Ambassador in Thailand’s capital Bangkok. Evonik used the event to present the “Evonik Road Safety Award” to the Department of Rural Roads, Thailand (DRR). This is in recognition for the DRR’s contributions to road safety in Thailand, especially in rural areas.
November 18, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
4009 Evonik Industries recently hosted an award ceremony at the Residence of the German Ambassador in Thailand’s capital Bangkok. Evonik used the event to present the “Evonik Road Safety Award” to the Department of Rural Roads, Thailand (DRR). This is in recognition for the DRR’s contributions to road safety in Thailand, especially in rural areas.    

Granted this year for the first time, the “Evonik Road Safety Award” is designed to support sustainable road safety initiatives and projects worldwide. This forms part of the company’s corporate and social responsibility. Evonik advocates good social development in all its global sites and supports charitable undertakings that raise the quality of life. With HE Rolf Schulze, German Ambassador, Dr Florian Kirschner, Country Head of Evonik Thailand, and Jochen Henkels, Business Director of Evonik Road Marking, presenting the award to DRR for its infrastructure project ‘Increase Children Safety – School Zones’. This represents Evonik’s recognition of the DRR’s contribution on boosting road safety in 3,000 school-zones in rural areas in Thailand.    

According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), Thailand ranks among the countries with the highest number of traffic fatalities/head of population. Many of the roads in Thailand, especially in rural areas, are suffering from poor pedestrian safety conditions. Footpaths have not been built and pedestrians are forced to walk on dirt paths, which can easily cause fatal road crashes. Even in school-zones, children are risking their lives daily to reach schools, as reports show that pedestrian accidents mostly involve children under the age of 10, particularly during the school term.    

To improve the children’s safety in school-zone areas, DRR began its road safety pilot project at Nonthaburi province in 2013. Besides implementing speed limitations, visual communication to create awareness was key in DRR’s considerations. Through the installation of edge lines, coloured anti-skid rumble stripes and pedestrian crossings based on MMA cold plastic-based road markings, the DRR has successfully raised awareness of traffic participants. Students, as well as pedestrians, are now better guided, vehicles speed have also been reduced significantly and public transportations run smoothly and safely.   

Surveyed students and parents strongly agree that the installation makes the way to and from school safer. With such a successful outcome of the project, this innovative, sustainable and environmentally-friendly solution has already been applied countrywide across more than 700 schools, and will be extended to 3,000 rural schools in the near future. With €10,000 cash prize associated with the award, DRR has asked Evonik to donate it to Queen Sirikit National Institute of Child Health as part of the project’s objective to boost child and adolescent safety in the country.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • IRF launches Innovation Award for Road Transport
    February 9, 2012
    No it's not a question posed by a precocious toddler or a rather senile judge but rather the name of an exciting new international competition launched by IRF and its global Transport Knowledge Partnership (gTKP) programme. InARoad (the Innovation Award for Road Transport in Developing Countries) has been created to recognise exemplary projects that have made significant impacts on transport in developing countries as well as to reward innovative and sustainable good practices in this field.
  • ARTBA presents its student transportation video awards
    October 9, 2015
    A high school student from Maryland was named winners of the 920 American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s (ARTBA) 5th annual “Student Transportation Video Contest.” She will receive a $500 cash prize.  
     
  • 3M is helping finance ARTBA programme
    February 28, 2013
    The American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) Foundation’s Lanford Family Highway Worker Memorial Scholarship Programme is to receive a major financial contribution from the 3M Traffic Safety and Security Division. This programme provides post-high school financial assistance to the children of highway workers who have been killed or permanently disabled in the line of duty. The scholarship programme was originally launched in October 1999 through a gift from the families of past ARTBA cha
  • Road markings initiative for Mexico
    December 3, 2014
    The increasing need for efficient and durable products providing greater road safety is a concern of many authorities around the world, with Mexico being no exception While the Mexican Government seeks to improve the safety of the country’s roads, many companies and local governments are also taking the initiative to make their mark. Over the past decades, cities around the world have experienced rapid urbanisation. The growth of urban centres like Mexico City, coupled with the expansive use of cars as a