Skip to main content

Independent analysis finds speed cameras do not reduce accidents

An independent analysis carried out by engineer Dave Finney of Thames Valley, UK speed camera data has found an increase in injuries after the devices were installed. The analysis, to evaluate the effect of fixed speed cameras on the number and severity of collisions at the sites where they are installed, was carried out on two groups of sites. One group includes all fixed speed camera sites in the Thames Valley area (covering Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire and Berkshire) that were active at the start of 2
June 10, 2014 Read time: 3 mins
An independent analysis carried out by engineer Dave Finney of Thames Valley, UK speed camera data has found an increase in injuries after the devices were installed.

The analysis, to evaluate the effect of fixed speed cameras on the number and severity of collisions at the sites where they are installed, was carried out on two groups of sites. One group includes all fixed speed camera sites in the Thames Valley area (covering Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire and Berkshire) that were active at the start of 2009, a total of 359 speed cameras within 212 sites. The other group is the subset of the 74 most recent of those sites.

The analysis is based on collision data recorded by Thames Valley Police in STATS19 and uses the database of collisions at speed camera sites created and verified by Thames Valley Safer Roads Partnership (TVSRP).

Finney used a technique he calls ‘four time periods’ (FTP) that is intended to account for the statistical phenomenon known as regression to the mean. Speed cameras are often deployed at sites following a higher than normal collision rate; therefore the collision rate would tend to reduce back to normal, whether or not speed cameras had been deployed. This change (that would probably have occurred anyway) is called RTM (regression to the mean) and its effect can be measured.

To compensate for the effects of general influences (or trend), analysis used relative collision rates at sites where the necessary data was available (the 74 most recent fixed speed camera sites). Collision data three years after installation was compared to a three year baseline period before, the effect of RTM was measured, and collision rates before and after installation were compared having fully excluded all RTM effects. At all 212 fixed speed camera sites (where part of the FTP method was used), collision rates before and after installation were compared, having fully excluded all RTM effects.

The report concludes that at 212 sites after fixed speed cameras were installed, compensated for general influences and not including any RTM effects or seasonal bias, there was a 38 per cent increase in fatal collisions and a 16 per cent increase in KSI collisions, while the overall number of collisions remains the same.

According to Finney, the evidence suggests that reducing vehicle speeds using fixed speed cameras has no impact in improving road safety. He also indicates that fixed speed cameras do not save lives and do not prevent serious injuries, nor are they demonstrated to have reduced the number of collisions.

He concludes with the recommendations that speed cameras should only be operated within scientific trials known as randomised controlled trials to measure the effect both installing and removing speed cameras and that increases in fatal and KSI collisions at fixed speed camera sites should be independently investigated.

Related Content

  • ITS World Congress debates perceptions of enforcement
    December 4, 2012
    The technical programme of this year’s ITS World Congress in Vienna includes a special session on the image of enforcement. ITS International examines the scale of the problem and what can be done about it. Debate on the merits and difficulties of enforcing speed limits appears centred on a conflict of principles. Put very simply, local communities, people living close to busy or hazardous roads, want to see traffic speeds calmed. Drivers on those roads, on the whole, want their principle of freedom to be m
  • Vision Zero is working says New York mayor, announces more funding
    January 22, 2016
    According to Mayor Bill de Blasio, 2015 was officially the safest year on New York City streets since record-keeping began in 1910, thanks to the city’s Vision Zero program.He said the 231 traffic fatalities in 2015 are 66 lower than the 297 fatalities that occurred in 2013, the year before Vision Zero began. Pedestrian deaths, a historic low of 134 in 2015, fell 27 per cent during that period. The previous lows were 2011 with 249 traffic fatalities and 2014 with 139 pedestrian fatalities.
  • Integrated weather and traffic data aids winter maintenance
    October 10, 2012
    A US pooled fund study group has developed a system of software aimed at taking the concept of winter maintenance decision support to a new level – a scientific ‘one-stop-shop’ of weather and service performance data. This report is by Charles Chambers and Benjamin Hershey. With advancements in environmental technology come new systems that assist agencies with better management of winter roadway maintenance resources. In the late 1990s the US Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) began work developing a pr
  • Effectively tackle vehicle pollution
    January 25, 2012
    In 2008, Italy's first traffic charge named 'Ecopass' was launched in Milan in an attempt to reduce road congestion and pollution levels as well as to boost public transport through the re-investment of the pollution charge revenues.