Skip to main content

Sweden winning over doubters

Comparatively little negative comment has been made in Swedish media with regard to the country’s widespread speed enforcement, according to project manager Eva Lundberg of Trafikverket, Sweden’s Transport dministration. Lundberg is due to give a presentation at the Vienna World Congress special session on enforcement, probably with more than a passing word on public acceptance. Trafikverket has put a lot of work into its Vision Zero road safety strategy over the past few years; much of it targeting reducti
December 4, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Sweden has increased speed limit compliance from 50% to above 80% (95% at camera sites), according to Trafikverket reports
Comparatively little negative comment has been made in Swedish media with regard to the country’s widespread speed enforcement, according to project manager Eva Lundberg of 6301 Trafikverket, Sweden’s Transport Administration. Lundberg is due to give a presentation at the Vienna World Congress special session on enforcement, probably with more than a passing word on public acceptance.

Trafikverket has put a lot of work into its Vision Zero road safety strategy over the past few years; much of it targeting reduction of traffic speeds. Since Vision Zero and an associated programme of enforcement were initiated in the late 1990s, Sweden has increased speed limit compliance from 50% to above 80% (95% at camera sites), according to Trafikverket reports.

Sweden now has 1100 speed enforcement cameras, but of the roughly 230,000 drivers recorded exceeding the speed limit last year, only around a third were penalised (the remainder were motorcyclists, foreign drivers or could not be recognised). “We do not see this as a problem,” Lundberg says. “The whole idea was to improve safety, partly by reducing traffic speeds. We have reduced fatalities by half, which is more important than numbers successfully prosecuted.”

The casualty reduction, Lundberg says, has been achieved by changing the mindset of drivers in Sweden, by alerting them to the criticality of certain speed thresholds for surviving collisions, and reducing speed limits accordingly at high risk sites. Other aspects of the Vision Zero policy have brought improvements to road infrastructure, such as introduction of barriers to 2+1 road layouts and a raft of urban safety initiatives.

“Where parts of the road network have experienced high numbers of fatalities, if we cannot upgrade the road then we put up cameras. It’s an engineering decision taken with comparison to other engineering options. The important thing is to inform the public of the cameras and why they are being placed there,” says Lundberg.
Matts-Ake Belin, project manager of Trafikverket’s Vision Zero Academy, has recently completed a PhD study ‘Target Zero’ in road safety. He says:

“A comparative study of approaches to speed enforcement adopted in Sweden and the State of Victoria in Australia found subtle but fundamental differences in the ideas underpinning each initiative.

In both cases the aim was to reduce traffic speed with technology.

In Victoria a strong deterrent was sought – for making drivers feel they can be caught at any time. This was successful, with fixed and mobile cameras, but the momentum has to be maintained.

“There are disputes in Australia over the motives of speed enforcement, but none such in Sweden, where there are now about 10 times as many cameras.

In Sweden it was often the road system that was at fault. Trafikverket wanted to change the perception and give the impression that changes have been made because the road was far too dangerous before.”

Alterations to Sweden’s road network have included introduction of variable speed limits at high risk sites such as road junctions or intersections, with speeds typically adjusted from 90km/hr down to 70km/hr depending on weather conditions, traffic flow and other circumstances. A field trial found that varying limits – shown on 537 VMS signs – reduced speeds by 5-15km/hr.

“Traditionally our approach was towards people not willing to comply with speed limits, but we now find most people do
not want to speed and so we are focusing on more support for them with better design of the road system,” Lundberg says. “We are planning to expand speed enforcement, with further communication initiatives through the media, transport authorities and police.”

Related Content

  • March 29, 2017
    When speed compliance becomes a safety issue
    David Crawford finds that softly, softly can be safely, safely when it comes to speed enforcement. Comedians and controversial TV presenters have long made jokes about having to watch the speedometer so closely as they pass speed camera after speed camera that they mow down bus queues. But the joke may have some factual basis according to a study by researchers from the University of Western Australia.
  • November 27, 2013
    Extra enforcement key to cutting road casualties in The Netherlands
    While The Netherlands already has some of the safest roads in the world it has ambitious plans to make them safer still, as Jon Masters discovers. In virtually all periodical studies and comparisons of countries’ road safety performance, the Netherlands is consistently in the top three and often leads the world, depending on how casualty figures are compared. According to the International Traffic Safety Data & Analysis Group (IRTAD) of the International Transport Forum, road deaths per capita have falle
  • January 23, 2012
    Speed reduction measures - carrot or stick?
    In Sweden, marketing company DDB Stockholm employed a mock speed camera as part of a promotional campaign for automotive manufacturer Volkswagen. The result was worldwide online interest and promotion of the debate over excessive speed to the national level. A developing trend in traffic management policy is to look at how to induce road users to modify their behaviour by incentivising change rather than forcing it through the application of penalties. There have been several studies conducted into this; an
  • October 19, 2012
    Benefits of investment in ITS technologies
    What price can be put on the value of a life? How much should be spent on preventing untimely deaths? Difficult questions such as these help to put the comparatively small costs of ITS systems into context. While monetary analysis may seem cold and inhumane in consideration of road casualties, death and costly clear-up are often the stark reality transportation authorities are dealing with. This issue of ITS International contains numerous examples of large benefits to be gained from relatively modest inves