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Road safety in Australia Chris Brooks Australian Transport Safety Bureau. 1970: 30.4. 2001: 9.1. Road deaths Per 100,000 Population. Road deaths per 100,000 population OECD and Australia. Road deaths per 100,000 population OECD nations 1998. Australia’s Challenges:.
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Road safety in Australia Chris Brooks Australian Transport Safety Bureau
1970: 30.4 2001: 9.1 Road deaths Per 100,000 Population
Australia’s Challenges: • Large country, low population density • Large cities, low population density • Few taxpayers per kilometre of road • Cities separated by large distances • Difficult to achieve efficient public transport • High reliance on roads for goods transport • Large annual distances per person and per vehicle • Perceived need for high speed limits • High rate of vehicle ownership • Old vehicle fleet (average age > 10 years) • High per-capita alcohol consumption.
Australia’s advantages: • Only moderate growth in vehicle usage (compared to some APEC economies) • Strong public support for strict regulation to improve road safety • eg: 98% support for Random Breath Testing. • Strong road safety research capacity • Not many motorcycles (compared to some APEC economies) • 2.7% of vehicles • 0.6% of vehicle kilometres • 12.4% of road deaths
Measures that have reduced road deaths: • Seat belts • required in all new cars since 1969 (front seats; front and rear since 1971) • compulsory use since 1972. • Random breath testing + publicity • Speed cameras + publicity • Helmets for cyclists and motorcyclists • Road improvements -including “black spot” programs (hazardous road locations) • Safer vehicles: improved occupant protection
Road safety in Australia’s Federal system • Federal Government • State Governments • Local Governments • Non-Government agencies
Road safety in Australia’s Federal system • State Governments: • Road funding • (shared with Federal and local government) • Road construction • Road rules • Traffic police • Licensing drivers • Public education • Registration of vehicles • Research & statistics
Road safety in Australia’s Federal system • Federal Government: • Road funding • major national roads (mainly inter-city) • “black spots” • New-vehicle standards • Research & statistics • National coordination
Commonwealth-State Coordination • Australian Transport Council (Ministers) • Austroads (roads and traffic agencies) • National Road Transport Commission • National Road Safety Strategy and Action Plans
National Road Safety Strategy 2001-2010 • “The road toll should not be accepted as inevitable.” • “The priority given to road safety should reflect the high value that the community as a whole places on the preservation of human life and the prevention of serious injury.”
The target: • 40% reduction in population fatality rate by 2010 • from 9.3 per 100,000 in 1999 to no more than 5.6 in 2010 (Endorsed by Federal, State and Territory Ministers at Australian Transport Council)
Safer roads (19%) • Building new, safer roads • Fixing hazardous locations • a small proportion of total road funding • but accounts for almost 1/3 of estimated safety benefits
Safer vehicles (10%) • Most of the predicted savings up to 2010 from vehicle improvements are from measures already implemented or scheduled • continued flow of benefits as newer, safer vehicles replace older ones.
Safer road user behaviour (9%) • Enforcement and education programs targeting: • speeding • drink driving • seat belts. • Small additional reductions from improvements in driver licensing and training • focus on extensive on-road experience for learners.
Possible problems • Vehicle use increasing faster than predicted. • Reduced enforcement impacts (drink driving, speed). • Increasing diversity of the vehicle fleet • more small cars, more big vehicles. • More motorcycle riders. • Economic factors.
Possible solutions: areas of focus • Speed management • Safer roads • Impaired driving • alcohol • drugs • fatigue • Vehicles (including new technology)
Speed: research findings • Small changes in travel speed make a surprisingly big difference to the risk of a serious crash • a speed increase of about 10% doubles the risk of a casualty crash • 5 km/h in urban areas • 10 km/h in rural areas. • A uniform speed reduction of 5 km/h across the road network would cut casualty crashes by about one quarter (27%). • “Moderate” speeding (up to 10 km/h over limit) adds up to a big safety problem.
40 RelativeRisk ofCrash Involvementfor Alcohol (RARU , 1980) 30 20 10 (case-control study) 0 0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25 BAC (g/100mL)
40 RelativeRisk ofCrash Involvementfor Alcohol and Speed (RARU , 1980) 30 (RARU, 1997) (60 km/h zones) 20 10 (case-control studies) 0 0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25 BAC (g/100mL) 60 65 70 75 80 85 SPEED ( km /h)
Comparing risks:alcohol and speed .15 .10 .20 .05 75 70 80 65 BAC .00 60 85 Speed (km/h) (in 60 km/h zones)
Speed management • Speed limits • Enforcement • intensity • tolerances • penalties • Education / persuasion • Traffic calming • New technology (eg, Intelligent speed adaptation)
Speed messages • “Every 10 km/h makes a difference” • “Wipe off five” • “Safe speeding: there is no such thing” • Advantages of lower limits on local streets
Changing community attitudes to speed National surveys:
Safer roads • Black Spot programs and “mass action” • Treatments with a high safety benefit: • fixing roadside hazards: • remove hazards or use barriers or replace rigid poles with poles that bend or break • shoulder sealing, audible edge lining, night-time delineation • replace intersections by roundabouts • traffic lights, including controlled right turns • separation of road users - centre barriers, pedestrian precincts, bike tracks etc
Impaired driving • Alcohol • random breath testing + publicity • introducing vehicle interlock programs • rehabilitation programs • Other drugs • alcohol test impairment assessment drug test • Fatigue • Truck drivers: legislation, training, “chain of responsibility” • Other drivers: education, safer roads, safer cars
Vehicles On the agenda: • Alcohol interlocks • Seat belt warning devices • Promoting awareness of safety ratings • Encouraging voluntary uptake of Intelligent Speed Adaptation (eg fleet vehicles) • Truck under-run protection • Automatic crash notification systems
APEC (RSEG) 12 major road safety problems Australia:Improving injury data • Accident data • 1. Best way to collect and share accident data. • Highway and traffic engineering • 2. Improve road network and traffic safety facilities • 3. Roadside cut slope management • 11. Accident black-spot approach to reduce accidents • Behaviour • 4. Speeding • 5. Impaired driving • 6. Vehicle overloading • 7. Seat belts and motorcycle helmets + mass action + speed limits (including road improvements to reduce fatigue risks) (looking at seatbelt reminder systems)
APEC (RSEG) 12 major road safety problems • Vulnerable groups • 8. Pedestrian safety • 9. Elderly people safety • Others • 10. Community approach • 12. Social awareness Speed management, road environment are key areas