China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Report: New laws required to reduce traffic risk

- By XUWEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

China should amend its lawon road traffic safety, as the illegal production and modificati­on of vehicles and electric bikes poses mounting threats to road safety, according to a report released by the top legislatur­e onWednesda­y.

The report on the implementa­tion of an amended road traffic safety law, conducted by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, said that a sharp increase in the number of vehicles and drivers poses major challenges to traffic management and a revision of the law is necessary to enable the authoritie­s to cope with the issue.

vehicles were on the roads nationwide last year, up from 107 million in 2005.

“There is a need to step up punishment­s for those violating the law, especially in terms of overloadin­g of trucks, and the illegal production and sales of vehicles,” the report said.

The illegal production, modificati­on and use of cargo trucks poses a major challenge to road safety, as the safety performanc­e of such vehicles is greatly decreased, making them more susceptibl­e to brake and steering failure, the report said.

The overloadin­g of cargo trucks accounted for more than 60 percent of major traffic accidents involving such trucks in 2015, the legislatur­e said.

Rising numbers of unlicensed electric cars is another problem. “Such vehicles cannot meet the compulsory standards for vehicles and have poor safety indexes. They contribute to traffic congestion and lead to accidents,” the report said.

The illegal production and use of electric bikes is another major issue, as large numbers of highspeed, large-sized electric bikes violate traffic regulation­s and cause accidents.

To solve such issues, authoritie­s should tighten law enforcemen­t and crack down on illegal attempts to modify and repair vehicles that have already been scrapped, the legislatur­e said.

China’s lawonroad traffic safetywase­nactedonMa­y 1, 2005. Since then, the number of drivers has increased from 75 million to 327 million in 2015, and the number of vehicles has increased from 107 million to 278 million in the same period.

The report was conducted by polling more than 334,000 people through news portals and the websites of provincial-level people’s congresses and traffic management authoritie­s.

About 62 percent of respondent­s said they believe drivers of electric bikes commit the most severe violations of the law. About 38 percent of respondent­s said motorbikes and trucks that transport constructi­on materials and waste also commit “relatively severe” violations of the law.

A majority of respondent­s said improper urban planning, an increase in the number vehicles and traffic violations are the top three reasons for traffic congestion.

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