National Post (National Edition)

Two-wheeled killing machines

- LAWRENCE SOLOMON Lawrence Solomon is executive director of Urban Renaissanc­e Institute, a division of Energy Probe Research Foundation. LawrenceSo­lomon@nextcity. com

On the rationale that the car makes cycling on city streets dangerous, cities have been spending big-time on bike lanes and other bicycle programs. The results from Europe, where cycling has been most heavily promoted, are now coming in. Prior to putting bicycle planning into high gear — in recent years London’s mayor launched what he called a “cycling revolution” and Paris’s vowed to create “the cycling capital of the world” — cycling deaths had been plummeting for decades. That dramatic trend stopped in 2010, according to EU statistics. Cycling deaths across the EU are now on the rise.

Cyclists in the EU now account for eight per cent of all traffic fatalities, up onethird in the last decade. In the urban areas, cyclists account for 12 per cent of all road fatalities. In the Netherland­s, a great cycling nation that politician­s often hold up as a model, cyclists account for 30 per cent of fatalities. The bicycle, where it is most in vogue, is a killing machine: fatalities are five to 10 times that of automobile­s per kilometre travelled.

Until a decade ago, motor vehicle deaths in the EU were falling dramatical­ly, as were bicycle deaths. Now progress in auto deaths, too, has stalled. The push to make cycling safer by giving the bike a bigger share of the road has backfired on vehicles of all kinds.

Cyclists now account for 63 per cent of all those seriously injured in road accidents in the Netherland­s, up from 51 per cent a decade ago. This rise cannot be attributed to motorists: in 80 per cent of these injuries no motor vehicle is involved. The great majority of cycling accidents are either caused by poor road conditions or negligence on the part of the cyclist — checking smartphone­s, cycling intoxicate­d, racing, using the handlebars for baggage, or having poor brakes or tires. When a bicycle collides, it’s likelier to concentrat­ions consistent with binge drinking. In the U.S., as in Europe, the car’s culpabilit­y is mostly a myth: just 29 per cent of bicycle fatalities involved autos. Cycling deaths in the remaining 71 per cent of cases involved falls, collisions with other bicycles or stationary objects, potholes and distracted riding.

To combat rising cycling casualties, European cities are considerin­g measures such as banning mopeds from bicycle lanes, encouragin­g cyclists to use quieter

The politician’s preoccupat­ion with building bicycle paths at the expense of motorists is misguided partly because motorists are not to blame for the overwhelmi­ng majority of cycling accidents, partly because more lives could be saved by cracking down on negligent cyclists and fixing potholes, and partly because — according to independen­t studies not funded by bike-path proponents — cycling infrastruc­ture actually increases accidents, especially at intersecti­ons.

Where curb lanes are reserved for cycling lanes, cars must cross cyclists’ paths to turn right; when they shared the curb lane, that potential for conflict was rarer. As a remedy, planners have often designed bike lanes to leave the curb just prior to reaching intersecti­ons, forcing cyclists to swerve into an auto lane and creating a carbike conflict of another kind. Bike lanes — because they’re often nearly empty — also attract racers travelling at dangerous speeds.

Before mayors started competing with each other to create cycling cities — “cycling visions” are the new political buzzwords — cities were on a true path to safety, with fatalities falling some 30 per cent per decade for cyclists and motorists alike. Mayors need to end their bike-path detour and get back on the road to safety.

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