Skip to main content

Road safety insights from iRAP

Road safety insights are now available from iRAP.
By MJ Woof August 5, 2024 Read time: 3 mins
Reducing road crashes and boosting road safety will save lives and benefit economic development too - image © courtesy of Tom Schwimmbeck


New data has been unveiled in iRAP’s Safety Insights Explorer, a critical datahub for decision-makers and partners worldwide seeking to understand the true extent of road trauma, the safety of the world’s roads, and the positive impact that can be made with targeted investment.

The Safety Insights Explorer helps to explain why road crashes remain a leading cause of death and injury in countries and worldwide, drawing from data that has been collected using the iRAP methodology by partners across nearly 600,000km of roads in more than 80 countries.

The updated Insights estimates that road death and injuries around the world cost US$3.6 trillion/year, equivalent to more than 3% of global GDP. Road deaths are estimated to cost $753 billion/year, followed by limb fractures costing $616 billion /yearand severe acquired brain injury costing $414 billion/year.

Greg Smith, Global Programme Director at iRAP said, “We are now halfway through the Decade of Action for Road Safety 2021-2030, with the global goal of halving road deaths and serious injuries by 2030.

“As countries prepare for the 4th Global Ministerial Conference on Road Safety in Morocco next year, this free tool is a must-have reference to inform evidence-based action to 2030,” Smith said.

A key feature of the Insights Explorer is that it provides estimates of the costs of fatalities and injuries by injury type, road user, age and sex. This unique analysis is made possible thanks to technical collaboration with the TAC, a no-fault road trauma injury insurer in Victoria, Australia. TAC road crash claims data show that more than half of all costs occur more than two years after a crash, buried deep within health and social welfare systems.

“Bringing the latest data together, and putting it freely in the hands of decision-makers and advocates, helps to support debate about the right scale of response to the enormous level of road trauma occurring every day,” Smith said.

Governments, development banks, donors and the private sector each have a role to play in mobilising the sustainable investment needed to reduce road trauma, with far-reaching economic and social benefits.

“We know safer roads save lives,” Smith said. “A recent study by Johns Hopkins University published in the respected journal PLOS One has verified that road safety infrastructure changes and safer speeds informed by the iRAP Methodology and tools have prevented almost 700,000 deaths and serious injuries since 2016.”
“There are few better investments than in safer roads and safe speeds,” he added.

Achieving UN Target 4 for the majority of travel to be on 3-star or better roads for all road users by 2030 stands to save more than 400,000 lives/year and nearly 330 million lives and serious injuries over the 20-year life of road treatments, with an economic benefit of US$986.7 billion to the global economy.

 

Related Content

  • Public-private participation for highway law enforcement
    April 18, 2017
    In some countries, public-private partnerships for road traffic law enforcement are helping to greatly reduce traffic fatalities. But careful implementation is essential, according to a new white paper. Big brother is watching you. Speed cameras are just a cash cow for local authorities. Police use them to keep their speeding ticket statistics high. The list of suspicions goes on. But there is nothing suspicious about road deaths, says Philip Wijers, chairman of the sub-committee on enforcement at the US-ba
  • DUI risk from cannabis continues for hours
    October 17, 2018
    New research has revealed that drivers remain under the influence for several hours after smoking cannabis.
  • €8.8 billion Polish road safety boost
    July 8, 2024
    Poland will invest €8.8 billion for a road safety boost.
  • Road deaths continue to fall in many countries
    June 4, 2015
    The latest information from IRTAD, the permanent working group on road safety at the International Transport Forum, shows that road deaths are falling in many countries worldwide. There were 42% fewer road deaths in IRTAD countries since 2000. However, strong disparities exist between countries, according to IRTAD’s latest data. In all 70 organisations from 39 countries are members of IRTAD. The 2014 provisional data show that 15 of the IRTAD member countries for which figures are available managed to red