Skip to main content

FIA Region I warns of ADAS ‘limitations’

Safety features are ‘good friends’ but drivers need to understand exactly how they work
By Adam Hill October 19, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
ADAS is here - but do drivers know how to use it? (© Andrei Dzemidzenka | Dreamstime.com)

The limits of advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) is the focus of a new safety initiative by roads campaign group FIA Region I.

“ADAS can contribute to safer roads,” says director general Laurianne Krid. 

“However, we need to speed up the harmonisation of these systems, and educate drivers on how to use them.”

The campaign is designed to raise European motorists’ awareness of some of the safety systems which will be mandatory on new cars from May 2022 and on all existing models from May 2024.

“In order to achieve tangible road safety improvements, drivers must understand assistance systems’ functionalities and limitations,” the organisation said in a statement.

“Lane keeping assist, adaptive cruise control (ACC) and autonomous emergency braking (AEB) are good friends, but drivers need to get to know them first,” Krid added.

There are certainly issues with ADAS, FIA Region I points out. 

For example: ACC may malfunction on roundabouts, under adverse weather conditions and at low or very high speeds; while AEB systems are designed to detect only cars, which means there may be a problem identifying pedestrians and cyclists.

A soon-to-be released study commissioned by FIA Region I shows that the great majority of drivers are unaware of how to operate ADAS - despite the fact that they are already present in vehicles, and set to be mandatory soon.

The campaign has been translated in 20 languages, and will roll out in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Asecap Days 2025: 'Vision Zero is not a number, it’s about a culture'
    May 29, 2025
    Saving lives and saving road infrastructure were two of the topics at the second and last day of the annual conference of Asecap, the European road tolling association, in Spanish capital Madrid
  • Virtual ITS European Congress 2020: report
    November 25, 2020
    ITS industry ‘needs to make a move towards each other’, Congress delegates hear
  • Bill Halkias: 'We need a sustainable world'
    April 20, 2021
    In the first of our Tolling Matters interview series, Bill Halkias, MD & CEO of Attica Tollway Operations Authority and president of the International Road Federation, talks to Adam Hill about post-Covid recovery and sustainable mobility
  • New legal basis brings EU wide cross border enforcement
    February 25, 2015
    Pan-EU enforcement is set to become a reality after legislation is revised. In May 2014 the European Court of Justice ruled that European Directive 2011/82/EU, which came into force in November 2013 to facilitate the exchange of information between member states in relation to eight road traffic offences, had been set up on an incorrect legal basis. The regulations had been introduced under police cooperation rules on the prevention of crime, but the Court decided that the measures in the Directive do not c