Skip to main content

ITF and FIA team to improve urban road safety

The International Transport Federation (ITF) and Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) are to launch Safer City Streets, the new global traffic safety network for liveable cities on 18 October during the UN Habitat III conference in Quito, Ecuador. Road safety is a growing issue for mayors and city managers. Cities address many challenges by working together and learning from each other – but so far not in the field of road safety data. Safer City Streets now fills this gap by linking cities t
October 18, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
The International Transport Federation (ITF) and 7113 Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) are to launch Safer City Streets, the new global traffic safety network for liveable cities on 18 October during the UN Habitat III conference in Quito, Ecuador.
 
Road safety is a growing issue for mayors and city managers. Cities address many challenges by working together and learning from each other – but so far not in the field of road safety data. Safer City Streets now fills this gap by linking cities that are working on making their citizens safer in traffic by improving the empirical evidence for policy decisions.
 
Cities provide data to the Safer City Streets database via a questionnaire and in return have free access to data from peer cities, thus allowing comparisons. The ITF manages the data collection and validation, analyses the data and administrates the network. Safer City Streets will go beyond the database by establishing a network of experts, whose goal is to exchange knowledge and learn from each other and their respective cities.
 
Safer City Streets builds on a 2013 pilot project with nine cities from Europe and North America that shared data on crashes, population, mobility and traffic. The success of the pilot gave birth to the idea of linking up cities worldwide for better road safety. Safer City Streets is modelled on ITF’s global road safety network of countries (known as the IRTAD Group), that has thrived for more than 25 years and which conducted the pilot.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Video analytics enhances urban rail safety
    December 16, 2016
    David Crawford explores some promising innovations for North American commuters. North America is experiencing a surge in commuter rail and metro development. The US now has 75 light rail and metro networks in operation; and California, in particular, is actively exploring ways of developing the state’s existing passenger rail operations into a fully integrated system.
  • ITF supports UN high-level Advisory Group on Sustainable Transport
    August 15, 2014
    The Secretary-General of the International Transport Forum (ITF) at the OECD, José Viegas, has welcomed the creation of a high-level Advisory Group on Sustainable Transport by UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon and pledged to support the work of the new body. The creation of the Advisory Group was announced by the UN on 8 August. It will consist of twelve leading representatives of the transport sector and is mandated to provide secretary-general Ban Ki-moon with recommendations on sustainable transport ac
  • Extra enforcement key to cutting road casualties in The Netherlands
    November 27, 2013
    While The Netherlands already has some of the safest roads in the world it has ambitious plans to make them safer still, as Jon Masters discovers. In virtually all periodical studies and comparisons of countries’ road safety performance, the Netherlands is consistently in the top three and often leads the world, depending on how casualty figures are compared. According to the International Traffic Safety Data & Analysis Group (IRTAD) of the International Transport Forum, road deaths per capita have falle
  • Car2Go to halt carsharing operations in Toronto
    May 29, 2018
    Car-sharing group Car2Go is suspending operations in Toronto, Canada, because of what it sees as restrictive regulations introduced by the city’s authorities. Toronto City Council is introducing its own free-floating carshare pilot on June 1 which Car2Go says makes its service ‘inoperable’. In a letter to users, Car2Go’s North America CEO Paul DeLong says that companies taking part in Toronto’s new pilot will be charged $1,499.02 per vehicle and that many streets which operate a residents’ parking permit