Cutting road deaths by half

Published: 13 October 2010 y., Wednesday

Keliuose - plikledis
Marrying diligent driver behaviour, quality road infrastructure and sound vehicles for safer roads across Europe.

About 35 000 people died on EU roads in 2009, a drop of more than a third since 2001. While this is a vast improvement, it’s hardly cause for celebration. According to a recent EU survey on road safety in Europe, most people agree that more should be done to reduce accidents.

Speeding, drinking and driving and not wearing a seat belt are leading causes of road deaths. But badly maintained roads and unsafe vehicles also pose unnecessary risks.

A new set of EU road safety guidelines  proposed last July focus first on training drivers and stepping up the enforcement of traffic laws. They also call for better roads, especially in rural and urban areas where the vast majority of accidents take place in comparison to motorways.

Vehicles could be made safer through the use of intelligent technologies, such as sensors to warn when a vehicle strays outside its lane.

Each year, 17% of deaths involve motorbike or moped users even though they make up just 2% of road users. Safety features such as advanced brake systems would improve this mode of transport’s lagging safety record.

For the third year running, the EU marks European road safety day on 13 October. This year the Commission presents these new guidelines for the next ten years, reaffirming the commitment it made in 2001 to half the number of road deaths.

Meanwhile, the Belgian presidency of the EU will showcase in Brussels some of the work done across the EU to combat the most common traffic offences.

 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Pilgrims mass for holy dip

Vast streams of pilgrims from far and wide have poured into Allahabad in northern India for one of the high points of the great Hindu festival, the Kumbh Mela. more »

Red Tape Scandal at Cotroceni

The civil servants employed by the team of the former President say that they are submitted to pressures to set free the positions they occupied by examination. more »

50,000 Czech TV Protestors Applaud Hodac's Resignation

Tens of thousands of protesters in downtown Prague loudly applauded late Thursday the decision by embattled Czech TV boss Jiri Hodac to quit his post, citing health reasons. more »

Prosecutor Disrupts Turner - Most Negotiations

On Wednesday, January 10th, the Russian Prosecutor General’s Office made an undisguised attempt to disrupt Media Most’s negotiations with media mogul Ted Turner on the sale of a stake in the holding’s NTV Channel. more »

American kidnapped in Chechnya

U.S. aid worker seized by armed men in war-torn region more »

Logging On to Hear Religious Call

Catholic Church Recruits Clergy on the Internet more »

Distribution postponed

The Latvian Cabinet of Ministers postponed the review of the European Union's PHARE funds distribution for the national economic and social equalization program Dec. 19. more »

Klaus Declares Legislative Emergency

The Czech parliament took steps today to speed up amendments to the country's media laws more »

December's "Sociumas"

In the newest issue of "Sociumas": Christmas traditions; transformation of intelligentsia; juvenile deliquency; links between technologies and society's life more »

Daghestans Attack Check-Point On Russian-Georgian Border

A group of Dagestani inhabitants attacked a checkpoint on the Russian-Georgian border on Thursday. more »