Skip to main content

Hikvision maximises safety with smart video technology

Around the world, thousands of people are injured or killed in road traffic accidents every day. To maximise safety for motorists and other road users, cities and highways authorities are implementing smart video solutions that alert emergency teams when an accident occurs in real time – supporting faster responses and potentially saving lives, says Juan Sádaba, ITS business development manager at Hikvision Spain
September 12, 2022 Read time: 4 mins
Smart video solutions allow authorities to improve the safety of drivers, cyclists and pedestrians

According to figures from the World Health Organisation (WHO), around 1.3 million people are killed every year due to road traffic accidents, with up to 50 million more suffering non-fatal injuries. Frighteningly, road traffic injuries are also the leading cause of death for children and young adults aged five to 29 years of age. 

Road traffic deaths also disproportionally impact vulnerable road users such as pedestrians and cyclists, who suffer more than half of all fatalities. The impact of traffic accidents is also amplified in developing countries, which suffer around 90% of all road injuries caused by accidents, despite having just 60% of the world’s vehicles.

Although the human cost of road accidents is the primary focus for cities and highways authorities, there is also a major economic impact. Specifically, according to WHO figures, road accidents cost most countries an average of three per cent of their gross domestic product (GDP). 

Due to the scale and severity of the road-safety challenge globally, city and highways authorities are constantly looking for new and more effective ways to protect all road users. Increasingly, smart video is proving its value here, allowing authorities to monitor traffic conditions and driver behaviour in real time, and react instantly if accidents or other dangerous incidents occur on the road.

How can smart video help?

Smart video solutions allow authorities to improve the safety of drivers, cyclists, pedestrians, and other road users in a number of key ways. 

Firstly, it can identify and prevent dangerous driving. With smart video, city and highways authorities can immediately detect erratic and dangerous driving, such as vehicles travelling the wrong way down a highway lane or one-way street. With alerts generated automatically and in real time, traffic authorities can arrive on the scene faster, helping to prevent accidents and resulting injuries to road users.

Another key way means the ability to attend the scenes of accidents faster to improve medical outcomes. With the ability to generate alerts automatically and in real time when an accident occurs, smart video solutions can help emergency teams to arrive more quickly on the scene. This enables significant improvements in treatment outcomes and ensures that first-response teams can save as many lives as possible. As a secondary benefit, arriving faster on the scene allows vehicles to be moved out of traffic lanes more quickly, securing accident sites and helping to avoid excessive traffic build-up.

Detect and avoid hazards

Smart video can also help motorists detect and avoid hazards – especially at night.

The most advanced smart video solutions fuse high-resolution video, radar and thermal imaging technologies to detect dangerous objects or animals on the road, even in low-light conditions, or at night. If hazards are detected, drivers can be warned in advance, either using smart roadside signage, or via mobile apps or other media – helping them to slow down and stop in time. This helps to prevent accidents and improve road safety, with the potential to save many lives.

The ability to detect accident black spots and intervene to improve safety is another important smart video benefit. Based on analysis of video data, authorities can understand where accidents happen, and why. These kinds of insights support measures to make problematic junctions and roundabouts safer, either by deploying traffic lights, putting up signs, creating pedestrian crossings, or by taking other actions to reduce accident risks. 

Achieve new levels of road safety with Hikvision

To meet the pressing need to improve safety on road networks around the world, Hikvision has developed a range of safety-oriented ITS solutions

These include AI-powered cameras that detect and report dangerous driving, alert traffic authorities in the event of a crash or other incident in real time, and support data analytics to reduce accident risks at accident blackspots. The company also offers solutions that combine video, radar, and thermal imaging to warn drivers of potential hazards on the road, and to reduce the risk of related accidents. 

To find out more about Hikvision ITS solutions and how they help cities and highways authorities to improve road safety for motorists, cyclists, pedestrians and other road users, please visit the website. 

You can also contact the company to learn more about how its solutions can support your road safety agenda. 

Content produced in association with Hikvision
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Global Road Safety Week focuses on 'little choices'
    June 25, 2024
    Education and awareness campaign designed to promote safe driving behaviour
  • Viaduct deck renewal creates detour dilemma for MassDOT
    May 26, 2016
    As the deck renewal of the I-91 viaduct in Springfield gets underway, David Crawford looks at the preparation and planning to ease the resulting traffic congestion. Accommodating the deck renewal of a 4km-long/four-lanes in each direction viaduct in the heart of Springfield (Massachusetts’ third largest city), has involved the state’s Department of Transportation (MassDOT) in a massive exercise in transport research and ITS-based area-wide preplanning and traffic management. Supporting a workzone of well ab
  • EdgeVis removes bandwidth barriers to mobile streamed video
    October 26, 2017
    A new generation of video compression can lower transmission costs of data and make streaming from mobile and body-worn cameras a reality, as Colin Sowman discovers. Bandwidth limitations have long been the bottleneck restricting the expanded use of video streaming for ITS, monitoring and surveillance purposes. Recent years have seen this countered to some degree by the introduction of ‘edge processing’ whereby ANPR, incident detection and other image processing is moved into (or close to) the camera, so
  • Car safety market worth US$152.59 billion by 2020
    January 20, 2016
    The Markets and Markets report Car Safety Market by System Type (Active Safety & Passive Safety), Safety Regulations by Region (APAC, Europe, North America & Rest of the World), Impact Analysis (Overall Market OEM, Tier I & Consumer) - Trends & Forecast to 2020 estimates the market to be US$93.73 billion in 2015 and projects that it will grow at a CAGR of 10.24 per cent to reach US$152.59 billion by 2020. The market report defines and segments the automotive safety systems market with an impact analysis