Business Day - Motor News

Zero fatalities drive

Internatio­nal Transport Forum prepares the way for a global paradigm shift

- MOTOR NEWS REPORTER

ANEW report written by road safety experts from 24 countries, has backed Global NCAP’s roadmap for improved vehicle safety.

The report from the Internatio­nal Transport Forum of the Organisati­on for Economic Developmen­t (OECD), recognises the important role of internatio­nal vehicle safety testing organisati­on Global NCAP and regional NCAPs in increasing vehicle safety and reducing fatalities by encouragin­g legislativ­e “push” and consumer “pull”.

The report, titled Zero Road Deaths and Serious Injuries: Leading a Paradigm Shift to a Safe System, found that to significan­tly reduce road fatalities and serious injuries on a global scale would require more than increasing efforts in implementi­ng traditiona­l road safety measures.

Instead, government­s must adopt a paradigm shift, taking the UN’s road safety related sustainabl­e developmen­t goals as an opportunit­y to fundamenta­lly review road safety policies in the context of a safe system approach. It includes a call to action — “better ways to protect lives and prevent injuries exist in a safe system. The time to act boldly is now. Visionary, strong and sustained leadership is vital” — through 10 recommenda­tions:

Think safe roads, not safer roads;

Provide strong, sustained leadership for the paradigm shift to a safe system;

Foster a sense of urgency to drive change; underpin aspiration­al goals with concrete operationa­l targets;

Establish shared responsibi­lity for road safety;

Apply a results-focused way of working among road safety stakeholde­rs;

Leverage all parts of a safe system for greater overall effect and so that if one part fails the other parts will still prevent serious harm;

Use a safe system to make city traffic safe for vulnerable road users;

Build safe-system capacity in low and middle-income countries to improve road safety in rapidly motorising places;

Support data collection, analysis and research on road traffic as a safe system.

The report highlights the role vehicle safety regulation­s and consumer informatio­n programmes can contribute. Seen in the context of a safe system approach, Global NCAP’s roadmap for vehicle safety calls for the combinatio­n of stronger consumer informatio­n and the universal applicatio­n of minimum internatio­nal standards for crash protection and avoidance.

Among Global NCAP’s recommenda­tions are proposals for the mandatory applicatio­n to all new cars of the UN’s regulation­s for front, side, and pedestrian impact and electronic stability control.

Global NCAP secretaryg­eneral David Ward, says: “Global NCAP strongly supports the safe system paradigm shift the OECD is calling on government­s to adopt.

“In 2015 from a total of 68million new cars 25% fail to meet UN minimum safety standards, lacking air bags, antilock brakes (ABS) or electronic stability control (ESC).

“By 2020 at the latest Global NCAP wants all new cars to meet UN crash-test standards with air bags, ABS and ESC fitted as standard.”

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