Road safety gains were not as marked in 2011 as in 2010 according to the new IRTAD report

The International Transport Forum has released its IRTAD Road Safety Annual Report 2011, which reveals road safety improvements were not as marked in 2011 as 2010.
May 2, 2012
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More work needs to be done to further reduce road accident levels around the world

The 1102 International Transport Forum has released its 3444 IRTAD Road Safety Annual Report 2011, which reveals road safety improvements were not as marked in 2011 as 2010. The report analyses the road safety performance of 32 countries in 2010 and also includes the latest provisional data for 2011. This report was prepared by the Forum’s International Traffic Safety Data and Analysis Group (IRTAD). Worldwide, at least 1.3 million people were killed in road crashes in 2010, while 50 million people were injured. Around 90% victims were in low and middle-income countries. High income countries are generally looking back on a decade with record reductions in road fatalities. Emerging countries undergoing rapid motorisation, however, currently see the number of traffic casualties increasing year after year. The United Nations launched its 3439 Decade of Action for Road Safety in 2011 with the aim of stabilising, and then reducing, global road deaths by 2020. Data presented in the IRTAD report focuses primarily on OECD countries and shows that road deaths continued to decrease in most IRTAD countries. Several countries reached new record lows in road fatalities. The latest, provisional data for 2011 shows a continuing downward trend for many IRTAD countries. However, half of the EU countries observed an increase in the number of fatalities in 2011.

Fred Wegman, chairman of IRTAD said, “We will need the benefit of hindsight to assess whether the increase in the numbers killed in some countries in 2011 is a re-adjustment after very large reductions in the last few years or whether the downward trend has reached a plateau requiring additional policies being implemented to lead to further reductions.”

Notwithstanding the mixed performance in 2011, several countries recorded a more pronounced reduction in the number of fatalities over the last three to four years than during the preceding 15 years. Among these are the United States, Hungary, Ireland and Denmark. It is possible that the financial and economic crisis that hit a part of the world recently has had a positive impact on road safety statistics through a variety of effects: a decrease in mobility, less goods transport by heavy vehicle traffic, fewer inexperienced high-risk drivers on the roads or a reduction in leisure driving. However, it has not been possible to quantify the impact of an economic downturn on road safety and a scientifically satisfactory explanation of this phenomenon is lacking. IRTAD plans to further research this relationship.

Severe winter conditions in many European countries at the end of 2010 and beginning of 2011 may also have impacted road safety statistics and this will be researched as well by IRTAD. Véronique Feypell, road-safety expert at the International Transport Forum and IRTAD co-ordinator, noted that, above all, “most countries now have in place well defined and targeted road safety measures, which have borne fruit over the last few years. We see the very complex issue of explaining trends in road casualties as a key area for cooperation in the IRTAD Group. We are also working on better understanding trends in serious traffic injuries, which in the past have received relatively little attention. IRTAD is working on getting countries to agree on a common definition that captures the full extent of the problem and has recently published guidance on reconciling police and hospital records to get an accurate estimate.”

The International Transport Forum will also release this year important research pieces on pedestrian safety, cyclist safety and the effectiveness of road safety measures which will be an important contribution to safety policy.
 

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