The Scotsman

Impact of 20mph zones in Edinburgh to be studied

● Study launched into safety benefits ● Motoring group questions impact

- By ALASTAIR DALTON

The impact of 20mph speed limits on safety and public health is to be examined in a new Scottish study.

Researcher­s will evaluate how the policy of reducing the limit from 30mph has worked in Edinburgh and Belfast.

Rates of traffic accidents and injuries before and after the change will be measured and any change in transport use will also be scrutinise­d by examining the take-up of cycling and walking.

Dr Ruth Jepson, from the University of Edinburgh, said: “We are excited to launch this major project, which we hope will provide very important insights into the public health effects of such initiative­s.”

The impact of 20mph speed limits on safety and public health is to be examined in a new study.

Researcher­s will evaluate how the policy of reducing the limit from 30mph has worked in Edinburgh and Belfast.

Rates of traffic accidents and injuries before and after the change will be measured to look at whether road safety has been enhanced.

Any change in transport use will also be scrutinise­d by examining the take-up of cycling and walking.

Residents will also be asked their opinions of the move.

There search team, led by the University of Edinburgh and the Scottish Collaborat­ion for Public Health Research and Policy, hopes the project will inform other cities planning to introduce lower speed limits.

It is the largest of its kind in the UK and will run until 2020.

Dr Ruth Jepson, from the university’s Usher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatic­s, said: “We are excited to launch this major project, which we hope will provide very important insights into the public health effects of such initiative­s.

“We anticipate our broad focus will generate a wealth of evidence and learning that will be invaluable for informing future roll-outs of similar schemes in the UK and around the world.”

The study is funded by the National Institute for Health Research and involves partnershi­p with other UK universiti­es, NHS Health Scotland, and the charity Sustrans.

Andy Cope, director of insight, research and monitoring at Sustrans, said: “This study will provide vital intelligen­ce on the impact of 20mph speed limits on safety and levels of physical activity.”

Green MSP Mark Ruskell has launched a consultati­on on a members’ bill to change the default speed limit in builtup areas across Scotland from 30mph to 20mph.

He said: “This is a very timely study and I’m confident the report’s findings will help the case we’re making in the Scottish Parliament to introduce 20mph speed limits in built-up areas across Scotland.

“By bringing forward legislatio­n, I want to create safer streets so we reduce the risk for pedestrian­s and cyclists, especially children and the elderly. By cutting speeds in the streets where we live, shop and go to schools or day centres, we can reduce deaths and injuries and boost public health with cleaner air.”

Neil Greig, policy and research director for the IAM Roadsmart motoring group, said: “We welcome any definitive studies into the benefits of 20mph limits, which seemed to have done little to change behaviour in Edinburgh so far.

“In our view, 20mph limits are popular with residents but the blanket approach with little change to the road environmen­t does not seem to be giving many people the feeling that walking or cycling will be any safer.”

Professor Chris Oliver, a consultant trauma orthopaedi­c surgeon at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, said: “Driving speed has a dramatic effect on the driver’s ‘cone of vision’.

“You can see a lot more detail at 20mph. At 30mph, the window shrinks dramatical­ly.”

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