Safe Speed issued the following PR at 05:28 this morning:
PR292: Road Safety: we're now the poor man of Europe
news: for immediate release
New official EU road safety figures [1] show that Britain is now the 'poor man
of Europe' in terms of road death reduction. In fact we have gone from hero to
zero in about a decade.
Between 1994 and 2004 the EU 15 countries cut road deaths by 39%, with Britain
lagging behind, 13th out of 14 countries with figures available. If we had
done as well as -say- Germany, British annual road deaths would be down to
2,266 [2] instead of a frankly awful 3,368 [3]. We're over 1,000 lives a year
behind schedule. This estimate is echoed by an extrapolation of our own
earlier trend in fatality rate reduction, and is a serious failure that Safe
Speed has long been highlighting.
In the last four years (2001-2004) we have reduced road deaths by only 6%
against an EU average of 14%. We're dead last - 14th out of 14 countries (who
have figures available).
Paul Smith, founder of the Safe Speed road safety campaign
(
www.safespeed.org.uk) said: "When will Department for Transport wake up and
admit that their policies aren't working? All their talk about road safety
targets amounts to nothing more than hot air. Lives are not being saved."
"I am absolutely certain, having spent thousands of hours examining road
safety data, that our poor performance is due to bad policy, and that the bad
policy is founded on 'speed kills' and speed cameras. There is so much more to
road safety than numerical vehicle speed."
"The knowledge and the cultural values that gave us the safest roads in the
world are being lost. We must urgently scrap speed cameras and return to
psychologically sound policies based on skills, attitudes and
responsibilities."
Code:
Reductions in road fatalities from 1994 to 2004:
Portugal -48%
Germany -40%
France -39%
The Netherlands -38%
Austria -34%
Denmark -32%
Greece -28%
Luxembourg -25%
Finland -22%
Italy -21%
Sweden -19%
Spain -15%
United_Kingdom -12%
Ireland -6%
Belgium NA [4]
EU15 -39%
Reductions in road fatalities from 2001 to 2004
France -32%
Luxembourg -30%
Portugal -23%
The Netherlands -19%
Sweden -18%
Germany -16%
Italy -16%
Denmark -14%
Spain -14%
Greece -14%
Finland -13%
Austria -8%
Ireland -8%
United_Kingdom -6%
Belgium NA [4]
EU15 -14%
The vast bulk of France's creditable improvements came BEFORE the first speed
cameras were installed on French roads in November 2003. An increase in Police
Traffic Patrols and an emphasis on drunk driving are thought to be leading
contributors.
Germany's policy statement in the new report [1] specifically mentions
management of road safety culture. Safe Speed believes that road safety
culture management is the single most important road safety policy device
available.
The British policy statement does not mention speed cameras or speed
enforcement, which is strange because the average British motorist experiences
very little else from road safety policy - yet there sometimes seems to be a
speed camera on every other street.
<ends>
Notes for editors
=================
[1] The new EU report:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/transport/roa ... doc_en.pdf
[2] (5812/9814)*3807 = 2,266
[3] 3,368 figure is the EU official GB figure and includes Northern Ireland.
[4] Figures for Belgium are not available.