Skip to main content

Joining forces on safety'

The European Transport Safety Council (ETSC) welcomed the launch of the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety, saying it will enable the European Union to join forces in tackling road safety at a global level. The UN move aims to reduce by 50% the projected increase in road deaths by 2020, and was developed with the support of the World Health Organisation (WHO), which predicts that road traffic injuries will rise to become the fifth leading cause of death by 2030 in the world. It demanded action to correct t
April 12, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
The 1197 European Transport Safety Council (ETSC) welcomed the launch of the 3447 UN 3439 Decade of Action for Road Safety, saying it will enable the 1116 European Union to join forces in tackling road safety at a global level.

The UN move aims to reduce by 50% the projected increase in road deaths by 2020, and was developed with the support of the 3263 World Health Organisation (WHO), which predicts that road traffic injuries will rise to become the fifth leading cause of death by 2030 in the world.

It demanded action to correct the situation now to prevent the carnage from increasing by more than 65% over the next 20 years.

According to some of the world's leading road safety experts, a significant coordinated effort of this kind has the potential to save five million lives and to prevent 50 million serious injuries over the next ten years.

Every year 1.3 million people are killed and 20-50 million are injured in road crashes around the world. In the WHO European region alone, 120,000 people are killed and 2.4 million injured in road collisions each year, yet the region is home to three countries with the safest roads in the world: Sweden, the UK and the Netherlands.

"The high level of road traffic deaths represents a global health problem. The EU has one of the best records on road safety. With this comes a responsibility to ensure that the outcome of this first UN Decade for road safety strikes a right balance between safety and mobility. Every life lost on a road is a life too many," says Antonio Avenoso, ETSC executive director.

The United Nations General Assembly has set the goal for the decade "to stabilise and then reduce the forecast level of road traffic fatalities around the world" by 2020, which is in line with the EU's new target to halve road traffic deaths by 2020 and adopting Vision Zero as its new long term goal for 2050.

Emerging countries

Around 90% of road fatalities occur in emerging and developing countries. The mixture of population growth and higher numbers of vehicles due to rising incomes are proving a deadly combination, as infrastructure and regulatory environment have difficulty keeping pace.
By contrast, in OECD (Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development) countries the number of road fatalities has fallen dramatically over the past decade, in some cases by 50%.

The annual summit of transport ministers at the 1102 International Transport Forum 2011 in Leipzig, Germany, presented contributions to the Decade of Action, and was told: "But even in the developed world far too many still fall victim to traffic: more than 100,000 men, women and children die on the roads of OECD countries, around 300 every day." The ITF's work focuses on overcoming the disconnect between the advances seen in some countries and the worsening situation in others, by facilitating knowledge transfer, encouraging best practices and benchmarking.

"We are pleased to contribute to this important and necessary UN initiative. We have a five decade-long track record in developing and introducing effective road safety policies, and will bring our experience in this field to the table during the Decade of Action," said Jack Short, Secretary General of the International Transport Forum, at a joint press conference with the WHO.

Related Content

  • UK achieves road safety success
    December 10, 2015
    The UK has the second safest road network in the world, beaten only by Sweden according to the latest traffic data analysis from the Department for Transport (DfT). Fatalities from road crashes account for 28.3 deaths/million of population in the UK, compared with 28 fatalities/million of population in Sweden according to the DfT data. It should be noted too that the UK has a larger population and a far higher population density, as well as 35.6 million registered vehicles (an increase of 41% since 1994) an
  • LIVE, from Leipzig, Germany: the ITF 2015 Annual Summit
    May 26, 2015
    If you couldn’t make it to Germany this year for the International Transport Forum’s Annual Summit, you can watch the live webcasts on the ITF website starting today. From this morning, Wednesday, at 11:00 Central European Time, the live webcast of the event will be available directly at this link: http://2015.internationaltransportforum.org/
  • Africa’s road builders need a reliable supply of good-quality bitumen
    May 8, 2015
    Crying out for consistency Getting hold of the right product, or any product at all, is often the challenge, as delegates to the Argus Africa Bitumen conference heard Many parts of Africa have ambitious road building plans for the next few decades. But clients and contractors are facing problems with the quality and supply of bitumen, delegates at the Argus Africa Bitumen conference were told. If there was one overriding message to come out of the conference, held in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania in Feb
  • Changing policy for Europe’s road funding?
    August 27, 2013
    The 2011 EC White Paper on Transport acknowledges that transport is the backbone of Europe’s economy, directly employing 10 million people and accounting for approximately 5% of EU GDP. In addition, it recognises that ‘infrastructure shapes mobility’ and that ‘curbing mobility is not an option’. Given the importance policymakers place on the ability to move people and goods seamlessly across Europe, it becomes rather hard to explain why they have neglected for so long the main ‘vehicle’ for mobility acro