Skip to main content

Stepping up the fight against road deaths

The International Transport Forum (ITF) has welcomed the target to “halve the number of global deaths and injuries from road traffic accidents by 2020” set by world leaders in September at the UN Sustainable Development Summit in New York. Every year, almost 1.3 million people are killed in road crashes around the globe, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
October 23, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
The 998 International Transport Forum (ITF) has welcomed the target to “halve the number of global deaths and injuries from road traffic accidents by 2020” set by world leaders in September at the UN Sustainable Development Summit in New York.

Every year, almost 1.3 million people are killed in road crashes around the globe, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

The target of a 50 per cent reduction in road deaths is much more ambitious than the previous international commitment: The UN Decade of Action for Road Safety, running from 2011 to 2020, set as its aim to first halt the rise in the number of road deaths and then begin to reduce them by 2020.

ITS says achieving the new benchmark, codified as part of Sustainable Development Goal (or SDG) number 3.6, will require a drastic acceleration in the implementation of highly effective road safety policies. It is a particular challenge for low and middle income countries which face rapid motorisation and where 90 per cent of road fatalities occur.

“The International Transport Forum welcomes ambitious targets for improved road safety”, said ITF secretary general José Viegas. “Benchmarks for reducing the death toll on our roads should be set at all levels - global, national and local.”

“The new UN target is the most ambitious to date. The global community will have to draw on all the available expertise, resources and initiatives to move towards halving global road deaths as soon as possible. The ITF will do its best to share knowledge about good road safety policies and help to implement them.”

This week, the ITF launches four new reports to help policy makers choose the most effective approaches to improving road safety in their national context: Improving Safety for Motorcycle, Scooter and Moped Riders; Why does Road Safety Improve When Economic Times Are Hard?; Road Infrastructure Safety Management; 2015 Road Safety Annual Report.

Another ITF Working Group is currently preparing a report on road safety as a safe system. This report will be published in late 2016 and build on the seminal report Towards Zero: Ambitious Road Safety Targets and the Safe System Approach” (ITF, 2008).

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Report exposes smart city tech gaps
    July 29, 2021
    World Economic Forum finds fewer than 25% of cities conduct privacy assessments
  • In-vehicle automation of safety compliance and other traffic violations
    January 24, 2012
    David Crawford explores new initiatives in enforcement. Achieving the EU’s new road safety target of reducing road traffic deaths by 50 per cent by 2020 depends on removing legal and institutional barriers to the deployment of new enforcement technologies, stresses Jan Malenstein. The senior ITS Adviser to Dutch National Police Agency the KLPD, and a European-level spokesperson on road and traffic safety, points to the importance of, among other requirements, an effective EUwide type approval process for fr
  • US pedestrian deaths highest since 1988, says GHSA
    March 13, 2020
    The Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA) said that 6,590 pedestrian fatalities occurred in the US during 2019 - the highest number in more than 30 years. 
  • Can ADAS impact middle-income countries?
    September 20, 2013
    Recent research by SBD shows that road-related fatalities are the eighth leading cause of death globally with more than a million people dying each year. Middle income countries, which include most ASEAN economies, account for 72 per cent of the world’s population and contribute to about 80 per cent of road traffic fatalities.