Skip to main content

IRF World Congress 2024: 'Silent pandemic' of road deaths must be reduced

Day 1 of three-day meeting in Istanbul focuses on sustainability and safety
By David Arminas October 16, 2024 Read time: 4 mins
Istanbul is hosting #IRF2024 (© Scaliger | Dreamstime.com)

Roads are much more than simply physical infrastructure. They are essential for the betterment of humanity, said Dimitris Mandalozis in his plenary session opening statement on day one of the International Road Federation World Congress 2024 in Istanbul. 

The IRF president set the tone for the three-day event, noting that collaboration between everyone whose business is roads is now more important than ever.

Mandalozis acknowledged the push for sustainable mobility and sustainable infrastructure is paramount for many road owners, designers and concessionaire companies. It is also driving innovation in road design and urban planning.

However, grandiose big city projects are one thing. What must not happen is better and more sustainable infrastructure for smaller cities and town – for those people who may be less well off – be forgotten in the drive for sustainability.

Most importantly, sustainable roads must lead to safer roads. His message was simple: “Say no to road deaths; say yes to sustainability and decarbonisation.”.

Abdulkadir Uraloglu, minister for transport and infrastructure in the Turkish government, also addressed the attendees, saying that government investment in infrastructure had greatly increased over the past two decades. This has allowed some of the highest value public-private financing in world. Roads, he said, must provide sustainability for not only the few but for everyone.

Robert de Groot, vice president of the European Investment Bank (EIB), said its investment in road infrastructure – typically up to 50% of a project – is set up to ensure the project is climate-adaptable, according to stringent EIB guidelines. 

Decarbonisation and physical resilience of infrastructure are key to longer asset lifecycles. Innovation in road design, construction materials and data capture are now so far-reaching that there has to be much more leveraging of data to build tomorrow’s transport network. 

In the end, says de Groot, “roads are about people” and should provide them with life-changing opportunities.

Adding to the theme that ‘we are all in this together’, Elizabeth Jones, senior transport adviser to the UK government’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, said no country is immune from the tragedy of road deaths. Globally, she said, the single biggest killer of people aged 5-29 years is road crashes in some form or another. She noted that in Africa, a 10% increase in transport infrastructure spending can account for a 23% increase in an economy – something that can pull a lot of people out of poverty.

Meanwhile, choosing electric vehicles can help in the quest for greater sustainability, said Mehmet Gurcan, chief executive of Togg, Turkiye’s first electric car maker. The company was founded as a joint venture by five Turkish companies in 2018. An assembly plant was opened in 2022 in Gemlik, next to Togg’s subsidiary Siro which produces the lithium-ion batteries.

Progress, said Gurcan, is being made in extending driving ranges for electric vehicles, as well as more - and faster - charging. But one of the biggest challenges now is to alter the mindset of vehicle consumers. Electric vehicles have different capabilities which requires owners to plan their trips differently from trips made by petrol-vehicles where a driver gets in and goes almost without thinking.

Gurcan also said that electric vehicle development, like today’s global automotive sector, is in a state of evolution. Development of the electric vehicle is like that of the mobile phone. The phone of 10 years ago looks nothing like - and works nothing like - today’s phones, which will probably look nothing like the phones a decade hence.

De Groot of the EIB also noted that, in a similar way, the concept of sustainability is not static but dynamic. Products, innovations and process that help sustainability goals today may not work in years to come and something new will evolve to replace the products, innovations and processes.

Whatever the future looks like, the fight against road deaths will continue, said Gurcan. 

The sector has to acknowledge that it is in a “silent pandemic” when it comes to road deaths and collaboration at levels in the road sector, from private companies, research organisations and governments at all levels is the only way to reduce the deaths. To this end he urges everyone in the sector to attend safety conferences and he pointed to the 4th Global Ministerial Conference on Road Safety, to be held in Marrakech, Morocco, in February 2025.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cost benefit goes under the microscope
    August 21, 2017
    Conventional cost benefit analysis (CBA) of plans for urban smart mobility initiatives needs serious rethinking, according to a recently-completed European study. The three-year Evidence Project (the Project) emerged in response to concerns about the availability and quality of documented research – including CBA – required to prove that investment in sustainable urban mobility plans (SUMPs) can be economically beneficial. Covering 22 sectors ranging from electric vehicles to shared spaces, the Project clai
  • We need to talk about AVs
    October 15, 2021
    Will driverless vehicles lead to more deaths and destroy more lives than their manual counterparts? Transport writer Colin Sowman argues that they will
  • Cooperative infrastructure systems waiting for the go ahead
    February 3, 2012
    Despite much research and technological promise, progress towards cooperative infrastructure system deployment is still slow. Here, Robert Cone and John Miles take a considered look at how and when it might come about. From a systems engineering viewpoint it looks logical and inevitable that vehicles should be communicating between themselves and with the road infrastructure. But seen from a business viewpoint the case is not proven.
  • The move towards shared telematics platforms
    February 27, 2013
    Is the end for dedicated, in-vehicle telematics systems now in sight? Some seemed to think so at the recent Telematics Munich 2012 conference… Geoff Hadwick reports. Forget smartphone apps – leave that sort of thing to Apple and Google,” Roger Lanctot, associate director of the global automotive practice at consultancy Strategy Analytics told more than 700 delegates in Munich last month at the Telematics Munich 2012 conference. They are a waste of time and money, he said. Forget putting too much data on das