Skip to main content

India road safety plan

A new plan for road safety in India is being established.
By MJ Woof October 14, 2020 Read time: 3 mins
India’s roads will benefit from a new safety programme, which will share knowledge globally - image courtesy of Pat Smith
A new plan is being established that will help to boost road safety in India and cut the country’s casualty rate.

The programme is being organised by iRAP and involves a novel 5-Star Global Connections Initiative. This is being sponsored by FedEx Express and is hoped to set up new partnerships across India. The programme will also share success across the more than 100 countries that have their own RAP programmes.

According to iRAP global programme manager, Judy Williams, "The initiative beautifully connects FedEx’s mission of 'connecting people and possibilities', iRAP’s vision for a world free of high-risk roads and IndiaRAP’s life-saving success. 5-Star Global Connections will be a gamechanger for the charity’s impact and see first results delivered in the Pilot country of India, where 17 deaths occur on the roads every hour."

The initiative includes four phases. The first is for the development of iRAP Connect, a global Partner Management System to store and track programme and partner success across more than 100 countries and 14,000 partners.  The second is for the development of a 5-Star Global Connections Strategy that utilises the system and its data wisdoms to connect people and resources for high impact local RAPs. Using the new global system, piloting of the 5-Star Connections Strategy in India with a focus on supporting all of the government and industry partners across the country and celebrating and promoting success in conjunction with local FedEx teams. And finally, there will be the development of a Celebrating Success Package that supports projects across India that achieve the UN Global Targets for 3-star and better roads as a framework for other countries to follow.

Jack Muhs, regional president, FedEx Express said, “We’re proud to support this important road safety initiative. It is estimated by the World Health Organisation that by 2030, road traffic crashes will cause more fatalities than HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis and, at FedEx, we believe we can help change these outcomes with our focus on connecting people and possibilities.  The FedEx support for the 5-Star Global Connections initiative of iRAP and the local FedEx Express support for IndiaRAP will help unite partners striving to make roads safer and save lives.”

IndiaRAP programme manager Dr Subhamay Gangopadhyay said, “This is an exciting initiative for our country. FedEx Express has provided vital support for the IndiaRAP programme launched three years ago to eliminate 1 and 2-star unsafe roads in the country. Over 21,000km of high-risk roads have been assessed across 14 states, informing over US$5.6 billion in upgrade investments. Over 3,300 engineers have been trained. We look forward to the programme impacts and partnerships that the 5-Star Connections will make.”

Williams commented that the development of iRAP 5-Star Global Connections is already well underway connecting our countries with partners, activities, projects, road assessments and upgrades, metrics, training and accreditation activities, knowledge and news.

"The system is providing wisdom and shared success from data – a holistic start-to-end view of the connections that are making a difference to eliminate high-risk roads – and most importantly the possibilities for progress, which in real terms is families getting safely home. iRAP Connect would not have been possible without the generous sponsorship of FedEx, pro-bono initial build support of Barhead and recent technical assistance of NTT (Microsoft Partners)," Williams said.

Related Content

  • Philips CityTouch brings street lighting into focus
    December 20, 2016
    As far as 99% of any city’s population is concerned, street lights are just, well, there. But big changes are taking place, as explained by lighting systems provider Philips Lighting. Street lighting has been with us for more than a century. With the exception of the early 20th century switchover from gas to electricity and the recent most important invention of LEDs, there have been few obvious changes.
  • Extended Traffic Control in 2014 and beyond
    April 3, 2014
    One leading traffic control solution company has announced a major acquisition to broaden its customer offer, while the delivery of an ambitious real-time journey information service for Scotland’s motorists is well on track. Guy Woodford reports Kapsch’s TrafficCom says its high-profile recent US$16 million acquisition of Transdyn will enable it to offer current and future customers worldwide an extended end-to-end product and solution portfolio for intelligent transport systems (ITS). The acquisitio
  • 17th IRF World Meeting & Exhibition: Sharing Knowledge Across Borders
    March 28, 2014
    IRF publishes highlights and proceedings of the premier event for transportation professionals in 2013 IRF World Meetings have constituted important focal points for the sector ever since the first Meeting in 1952. Held on 10-14 November 2013 against a backdrop of unprecedented infrastructure expansion in Saudi Arabia, the 17th IRF World Meeting & Exhibition continued this proud tradition and set new standards for scale, scope and outreach.
  • Shantui diversifying from core dozer line
    October 14, 2013
    Chinese bulldozer firm Shantui is building on its core competency of bulldozers, broadening its range as well as its operations – Mike Woof writes Bulldozer specialist Shantui has a clear policy of broadening its product range, having grown from being a small producer with a limited model line-up to become a major global manufacturer. The company began its diversification process in 1999, buying a road machinery range and then following this up with a line of concrete equipment in 2008. This process cont