Burton Mail

THE BIG ISSUE ‘It’s every driver’s worst nightmare’

NEW FIGURES HAVE REVEALED A HOST OF SAFETY TECHNOLOGY FAILURES ON OUR SMART MOTORWAYS

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TECHNOLOGY aimed at keeping drivers safe on smart motorways frequently stops working, an investigat­ion has found. There have been hundreds of incidents when safety equipment was out of action, figures obtained by BBC Panorama show.

AA president Edmund King said these failures are “every driver’s worst nightmare” as he called for hard shoulders to be reinstated on all smart motorways where they have been removed.

National Highways insists evidence shows all types of smart motorways are safer than convention­al motorways in terms of deaths or serious injuries, and a series of safety improvemen­ts have been made since 2021.

Some 193 miles of all-lane running (ALR) smart motorways – which use the hard shoulder as a permanent live traffic lane – were built in England to increase capacity at a lower cost than widening roads.

The M6 features a smart motorway set-up between junctions 10a (M54) and 13 (Stafford) and junctions 16 (Crewe) to 19 (Knutsford).

There have been long-standing safety concerns after fatal incidents in which vehicles stopped in live lanes were hit from behind.

Camera and radar systems have been deployed in a bid to spot stranded vehicles, but figures obtained by Panorama in response to a Freedom of Informatio­n request show 397 power outages on smart motorways between June 2022 and February 2024.

Examples of safety technology being cut off for days include:

No signs, signals, camera or radar at Junction 18 on the M6 for five days in July 2023;

No signs, signals or CCTV at Junction 22 on the M62 for five days in September 2023;

No signs, signals, sensors or CCTV at Junction 6 on the M5 for three days in December 2023.

The longest power failure was at Junction 14 on the M4, where there were no signals or sensors for 11 days.

There were 174 power outages in the six months to February 2024 – the most recent period covered by the figures – which is equivalent to nearly one every day.

Mr King said: “We have been exposing the dangers of smart motorways for more than a decade.

“Four-fifths of our members tell us that they want smart motorways scrapped and the hard shoulder reinstated.

“Efforts have been made to retrofit safety at great expense, but you can never fully correct such a flawed design.

“We are calling on all political parties to abolish smart motorways.

“The Panorama investigat­ion questions what happens when the technology fails, which is every driver’s worst nightmare.”

A National Highways report published last December revealed that smart motorways without a hard shoulder were three times more dangerous to break down on than those with an emergency lane.

The number of people killed or seriously injured after a stopped vehicle was hit by a moving vehicle was 0.21 per 100 million vehicle miles travelled on ALR smart motorways between 2017 and 2021.

That compares with 0.07 on controlled smart motorways, which have variable speed limits but retain a hard shoulder, and 0.10 on convention­al motorways.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak cancelled all future planned smart motorway projects in April last year, citing financial pressures and a lack of public confidence in the roads.

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