Skip to main content

UN commits to road safety goal

Delegates want more investment to ensure road deaths and injuries halve by 2030
By David Arminas July 12, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Eliminating 'high-risk' roads is a key aim of policymakers (© ITS International)

Government officials and United Nations representatives from dozens of countries met for the first-ever UN High-Level Meeting on Road Safety, held in New York City.

The goal was to ensure the 2030 vision to eliminate high-risk roads and secure a decade of action and delivery by national governments.

Recognising the unacceptable scale of road trauma globally, they committed to an increase in investment and action to ensure that the Sustainable Development Goal to halve road deaths and injuries by 2030 is met.

Ensuring the Global Plan for the Decade of Action is embraced and implemented at a national level was highlighted by many, including the need to meet Targets 3 and 4 for safer road infrastructure for all road users.

Target 3 states that by 2030, all new roads will achieve technical standards for all road users that take into account road safety or meet a three-star rating or better.

Meanwhile, Target 4 states that by 2030, more than 75% of travel on existing roads will meet technical standards for all road users that take into account road safety.

Rob McInerney, iRAP chief executive, and global strategic projects director Julio Urzua met with ministers and delegations to support their ongoing efforts to target high-risk roads, set policy targets for 3-star or better new and existing roads, provide the business case for safer roads and invest in the proven treatments that can save lives and reduce injuries.

“Building on the iRAP partnerships that now extend across more than 100 countries worldwide and an associated $80 billion of investment made safer, the event provided the opportunity for delegations to share success and inspiration for what is possible as leaders committed to securing a decade of action and delivery for road safety,” said McInerney.

The meeting was attended by heads of state, ministers and member states’ representatives of Permanent Missions to the United Nations, as well as select road safety non-government organisations and stakeholders, granted attendance by application.

It resulted in a political declaration and, based upon provisional analysis by the Global Alliance of NGOs for Road Safety, the presentation of 73 Statements by Member States sharing the road safety progress of their countries.

Of those, 60 mentioned a national strategy, 58 mentioned an explicit or implied target to reduce road deaths and 14 mentioned a budget allocation.

More information about the work of iRAp can be found by clicking here.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • How to secure future shares in mobility
    May 19, 2022
    Shared Mobility Action Agenda focuses on transport from ride-hail to micromobility
  • Asecap highlights safety of road workers
    June 25, 2025
    One-day (S)he Works / I campaign runs today, 25 June 2025
  • FIA launches road safety initiative: #ParkYourPhone when on the road
    September 28, 2017
    European MEP Dieter Liebrech Koch, FIA Region I and its member Clubs are launching #ParkYourPhone, a campaign to encourage responsible smartphone use in traffic. The campaign will be rolled out across Europe the Middle East and Africa by FIA Clubs in autumn 2017. MEP Koch said that while Europe has done much to improve safety, be it on technical improvements of the vehicles, better training for road users or infrastructure, new technologies, such as smart phones and tablets, bring about new challenges.
  • Taking the long term view to toll safety, adopting new technology
    July 17, 2012
    OmniAir's Tim McGuckin takes a look at what happens when a tolling authority makes safety its principal operating criterion. The bottom - line effects, he says, are not as onerous as one might think. Replacing an existing 915MHz-based Electronic Toll Collection (ETC) system with a new 915MHz system for toll collection is - from a technology standpoint - comparable to trading in your 1999 high-mileage Buick for another 1999 Buick with '0' on the odometer.