Skip to main content

EU missing target of halving road deaths by 2020, says ETSC

Halving the number of deaths on Europe’s roads by 2020 is not likely to be achieved, according to the European Transport Safety Council. The 28 members of the European Union reduced the number of road deaths by 20% from 2010-2017, far less than the 38% cut needed to stay on course to meet the 2020 target. The European Commission has just published data showing that deaths on EU roads fell by only 2% last year, following a similar decrease in 2016 and a 1% increase in 2015. “For four years in a row, the
April 12, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
Good, but will it be good enough (photo courtesy of Road Safety Support)

Halving the number of deaths on Europe’s roads by 2020 is not likely to be achieved, according to the 1197 European Transport Safety Council.

The 28 members of the 1116 European Union reduced the number of road deaths by 20% from 2010-2017, far less than the 38% cut needed to stay on course to meet the 2020 target.

The European Commission has just published data showing that deaths on EU roads fell by only 2% last year, following a similar decrease in 2016 and a 1% increase in 2015.

“For four years in a row, the European Commission has announced poor results on road safety,” said Antonio Avenoso, executive director of ETSC. “There has been almost no new EU action on concrete policy measures to combat the scourge of road deaths and injury. The time for action is long overdue.

“ETSC is eagerly awaiting for the Commission to come forward with a package of long-awaited road safety legislation. We are calling for safer vehicle standards such as mandatory fitment of automated emergency braking and intelligent speed assistance, better infrastructure safety rules and a solid framework for the safe rollout of automated driving within weeks not months,” he said.

“It’s also time to see a new long-term plan for the next decade with a clear strategy for halving the number of people that die or are seriously injured on our roads every week.”

The data shows that 25,300 people lost their lives on EU roads last year and many more were left with life-changing injuries. “Road safety is of course a responsibility shared with the member states, but I believe that the EU can do more to better protect Europeans,” said Violeta Bulc, the European Commission’s Commissioner for Transport.

“The Commission is working on a series of concrete measures that we plan to announce in the coming weeks. The ambition is clear: saving more lives on our roads."
 
The Commission also noted that with an average of 49 road fatalities per one million inhabitants, European roads remained by far the safest in the world in 2017.

The best records per million inhabitants, Sweden had 25 deaths, the UK had 27 and the Netherlands 31 and Denmark 32. Compared to 2016, the countries that showed the best improvements were Estonia whose fatalities dropped 32% and Slovenia with 20% fewer deaths. Only Romania and Bulgaria recorded a fatality rate higher than 80 deaths per million inhabitants.

Laurianne Krid, a director general with FIA – Federation Internationale de l’Automobile, based in Paris – welcomed the decrease of 2% of road fatalities last year. However, more needs to be done.

“With the revision of the General Safety Regulation, the Commission has an opportunity to make live-saving vehicle technologies mandatory. We must ensure that these new technologies have a track record of effectiveness. Autonomous emergency braking is one such technology that should be made standard,” she said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • US road safety is a cause for concern
    September 6, 2021
    There is concern over a worrying trend in US road safety, while there have been steady gains in road safety in Europe
  • Step up Action! IRF in New York for the launch of the UN Road Safety Fund
    June 15, 2018
    The Road Safety community gathered in New York on 12th-13th April for the launch of a new United Nations Road Safety Trust Fund. The new UN Fund is intended to catalyse road safety action across the globe, using donations to help unlock new government and municipal funding and refocus national road safety budgets towards proven ‘Safe System’ interventions. The FIA Foundation has pledged a donation of US$10 million to kick-start the fund launched by UN deputy secretary-general Amina Mohammed. The FIA Found
  • Road safety improvement across Europe
    June 18, 2021
    Road safety improvements vary across Europe.
  • Safer roads and vehicles with new European standard
    January 11, 2019
    New EU rules covering road infrastructure safety and minimum vehicle safety have been given approval in the European Parliament. The European Transport Safety Council (ETSC) is now calling for the EU to reach a final deal on both pieces of legislation. The European Parliament’s Transport committee voted to approve an update to rules governing road infrastructure safety management. The existing requirements ensure governments carry out regular road safety audits, identify high-risk sites and prioritise s