Skip to main content

Impact of speed limits in Barcelona

When Barcelona imposed an 80km/h (50mph), the result was significant in environmental, accident, fatality and injury terms. The 80km/h speed limit had the same positive environmental effect as if 22,100 cars were eliminated from the roads in the metropolitan area. Moreover, a reduction in the consumption of fuel by more than 24,000 tonnes per year was also achieved, while accidents, fatalities and injuries also showed substantial improvement.
January 20, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
When Barcelona imposed an 80km/h (50mph), the result was significant in environmental, accident, fatality and injury terms. The 80km/h speed limit had the same positive environmental effect as if 22,100 cars were eliminated from the roads in the metropolitan area. Moreover, a reduction in the consumption of fuel by more than 24,000 tonnes per year was also achieved, while accidents, fatalities and injuries also showed substantial improvement.

Background

In July, 2007, the government of 635 Catalonia, one of the autonomous regions of Spain with 7.5 million inhabitants, approved the Action Plan 2007-2009 for improving air quality in the metropolitan area of Barcelona, capital city of Catalonia. Barcelona city has 1.5 million inhabitants and the metropolitan area 4.5 million.

The overall aim of the Action Plan was to establish measures to reduce and eliminate polluting emissions in order to improve the health and life expectancy of citizens and increase the quality of life for those living in the metropolitan area. These measures are applied in different sectors, such as the harbour, the airport and the city itself.

The Action Plan was wide-ranging. It comprised some 73 measures that would be implemented. The total programme had a budget of €279 million (US$380.5 million) for new actions and €1.14 ($1.55) billion for providing support to actions initiated through other plans.

Speed limits

One of the 73 measures implemented was the introduction of speed limits on the access roads to Barcelona. The Catalan traffic service (Servei Català de Trànsit) regulates the maximum speed on different access roads. In a first step, in 2008, a maximum speed of 80km/h was introduced on the motorways and main roads in the metropolitan area; this was called the 'Zone 80km/h' initiative. The measure affects 16 municipalities, all of them located in direct neighbourhood to the city of Barcelona. In a second step, the speed limit will be regulated on individual road segments depending on parameters like contamination, congestion and safety.

What is surprising, and counter-intuitive, is that the imposition of the 80km/h speed limit has not led to a significant increase of the average trip time. It has been proven that, for example on a trip from the city of Molins de Rei to Barcelona, a distance of just under 20km and where the speed limit had been 100km/h before the introduction of the speed limit, trip time has only increased by one minute. In the worst of the cases, the speed reduction to 80km/h leads to an increase of three minutes over the total trip time.

Project:
'Zone 80km/h' - Speed management on access roads to Barcelona, Spain

Benefits (2008-2010):

• Emission reduction by 11% (excluding traffic reduction due to crisis factors),representing the equivalent of 22,100 fewer car trips
• Reduction of fuel consumption by more than 24,000t/year
• 16% reduction of number of accidents in the area
• 42% reduction of people severely injured in accidents
• 50% reduction of number of persons killed in accident
Intermediate resultsThe intermediate report of the Government Plan on air quality improvement (Plan de mejora de la calidad del Aire), presented in autumn 2010, draws the conclusion that Zone 80km/h has contributed to improving air quality, especially in the area close to the access road. To quantify that, limiting speed on the access roads to Barcelona has helped to reduce the emissions by 11 per cent, a percentage which excludes the reduction in mobility due to traffic accidents and other highway incidents. In the case of traffic accidents recorded on the access roads covered by the scheme since its introduction, according to the Catalan Transit Service (Servei Català de Trànsit), in the 80km/h area, the number of fatalities has dropped by 50 per cent, from 12 to six people. The number of severely injured has dropped by 42 per cent, from 55 to 32, and the number of accidents by 16 per cent.

Related Content

  • June 14, 2018
    Road pricing is inevitable – because the ‘user pays’ principle is fair
    We pay for roads through our taxes: the poor pay proportionately more, and effectively subsidise the rich. It would be fairer to accept the ‘user pays’ principle, says Dr John Walker. Road pricing is already used worldwide to combat congestion and pollution, to compensate for falling revenues from fuel duty (‘gas tax’), to provide an alternative (and fairer) means of charging motorists than the 80-year old fuel tax and to improve the efficiency of and expand transport infrastructure. However, it could and s
  • January 10, 2014
    The sunshine subsidy for Colorado’s tollways
    David Crawford reports on energy cost cutting on US highways. Just over a year after switch-on and with two global awards under its belt, the longest solar-powered toll road in the US is generating heightened interest in highway applications of alternative energy. The E-407, which loops around the eastern perimeter of the Denver metropolitan area in Colorado, won the International Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association (IBTTA) President’s Overall Award for Excellence at its September 2013 Annual Meeting in
  • January 19, 2015
    Positive report on reduced speed limit on Paris ring road
    Just one year after the introduction of the reduction of the speed limit from 80 km/h to 70 km/h on the Paris ring road, reports from the City Hall paint a positive picture of the results of this controversial measure. Accidents on the ring road are said to have reduced by 15.5 per cent, from 742 in 2013 to 627 in 2014, while the number of injuries has reduced from 908 in 2013 to 776 in 2014. Ironically, the reduced speed limit has resulted in an increase in the morning average speed from 32.6 km/h in
  • December 1, 2015
    VW scandal prompts emissions testing debate
    In the wake of the VW scandal John Kendall looks at emissions testing on both sides of the Atlantic. Since the VW emissions story broke in September, emissions testing has come under greater scrutiny, and none more so than in Europe, where critics have long been highlighting the weaknesses of the testing system. Ironically, changes to the emissions testing process were already under review but the story has pushed it up the agenda.