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Title: 1. dia


1
XII-th INTERNATIONAL TRANSPORT CONFERENCE ROAD
TRANSPORT PROBLEMS, WAYS OF THEIR SOLUTION
AND DEVELOPMENT PROSPECTS Successfull
solutions for road safety (Hungarian
exprerience) Presented by mr. Zsolt Csaba
HORVATH Master, assistant professor Budapest
University of Technology and Economy Yalta,
14-17/09/2011
2
Extent and nature of casualty problem in EU
  • 2001
  • Over 40,000 people killed
  • 3.3 million people injured
  • Costs exceeded 180 billion (i.e. twice the
    annual budget of the EC 2 of EU GDP)

3
Extent and nature of casualty problem in EU
(cont.)
  • 1st of May 2004
  • 10 accession countries joined the EU
  • Total population increased to over 450 million
    people
  • Estimated number of road crashes is expected to
    increase by 25 to over 50,000 each year

4
Extent and nature of casualty problem in EU
(cont.)
  • EC
  • Adopted a target of reducing fatalities by 50
  • Identified several areas where it could make a
    direct contribution within the constraints of
    subsidiarity
  • Road Safety Action Program (RSAP)
  • Reaffirmed the target
  • Provided further detail about actions it planned
    to introduce

5
The ultimate goal No road deaths
  • How to get there?
  • Introduce and implement safe system approach in a
    long-term
  • Adopt a level of ambition to eliminate road
    fatalities and serious injuries in the longer
    term - with steady progress through interim (good
    practice) strategies and targets in the short to
    medium term

OECD, 2008
6
Why and what to set goals for?
  • Setting goals in road safety alone leads to
    improvements by creating a structure for their
    realization, monitoring
  • The overall goal needs to be accompanied by
    partial objectives so as to allow for evaluation,
    accountability

Eksler, 2009
Wegman et al., 2004
7
EU target
  • In 2002, the EU set an ambitious target to halve
    the number of road victims between 2001 and 2010
  • Shared target supposing different contribution
    from Member States
  • Limited accountability measures and tools
    availability

White Paper (2001) "European transport policy
for 2010  time to decide
3rd Road Safety Action Programme (2003) Sharing
responsibility
8
Shared responsibility (3rd RSAP)
  • Weakness comes from the lack of accountability
    responsibility is not sufficiently attributed to
    concrete actors.

Make safer vehicles
Improve road users behavior
Improve road infrastructure
9
EU target
  • 1st EU target triggered further road safety
    improvement particularly in Western Europe

10
EU progress towards targets
  • Currently, a delay at least of 6 years for the EU
    as a whole.

11
Contribution of Member States (1)
  • Five countries at sight of the target
  • France and Luxembourg are almost there

ETSC, 2009
12
Contribution of Member States (2)
  • Most EU countries have a general road safety
    target Many of them a very detailed strategy with
    sub-targets
  • No accountability mechanisms exists and the EU
    has no legal instrument to put a pressure on
    underperforming countries.
  • Only approach available is blame and shame used
    by NGOs, associations, media
  • ETSC has been monitoring contribution of MSs and
    their performance in various areas of road safety

13
Policy orientations on road safety 2011-2020
  • 3 Pillars
  • A common European road safety area
  • Shared responsibility (EU, national, local)
  • An integrated approach with other policies
    (health, environment, employment, etc.)

14
A shared responsibility
  • Action by ALL stakeholders is needed
  • Public Authorities EU Central
  • Governments Local Authorities
  • Private Companies Car industry
  • Transport companies Road operators
  •  Corporate responsibility 
  • Users everybody !
  • The EU acts wherever it provides an added value

15
Integrated approach
16
Main strategic items
  • Improve education and training of road users
  • Increase compliance with road traffic rules
  • Safer road infrastructure
  • Safer vehicles
  • Promote the use of modern technology to improve
    road safety
  • Improve emergency and post-care services
  • Improve safety of vulnerable road users.

17
Case of France (1)
  • Targets introduced bottom-up
  • Political will from the highest level - to bring
    credibility to the enforcement system
  • Zero Tolerance of speeding offences
  • Introduction of a fully automated speed
    management system

French Road Safety Observatory estimated that 75
of the massive reduction in road deaths in early
2000s was due to reduced speeds.
18
Case of France (2)
  • A new target set in 2008 no more than 3,000
    deaths in 2012
  • Through speed management, drink-driving
    counter-measures, red-light passing and
    safe-distance keeping checks

19
Case of Portugal (1)
  • Top-down approach in target setting
  • In 2003, the 1st National Road Safety Plan
    adopted with the objective of -50 of road deaths
    by 2009
  • More than 100 concrete measures involving
    revision of Highway Code, Extensive high risk
    site removal schemes
  • Sub-targets 90 seat belt wearing rate on front
    seats, 60 on rear seats

20
Case of Portugal (2)
  • Made good use of EU funds to improve road network
  • New National Road Safety Strategy includes new
    quantitative targets for the period 2008-2015
  • New subtarget on injuries

21
Case of Hungary (1)
  • Main targets
  • - Reduce a road and fatal accidents with 30 -os
    till 2010
  • - Reduce a road and fatal accidents with 50 -os
    till 2015

22
Case of Hungary, modules
  • New powerfull orgazation for coordination (NTA)
  • New National Road Safety Strategy i
  • Objective resposibility
  • zero tolerance
  • new tarffic penalty point system
  • New list for speed limit
  • Higher penalty for using a mobile phones
  • More legal support to pedestrains and children

23
Case of Hungary, documented speed records(2009,
2010)
24
Case of Hungary, equipments and tools (1)
  • Establish a new, powerfull and well-equipped
    central transport authority (NTA) for a
    coordination of
  • Made good use of EU funds to improve road network
    (and its safety)
  • New National Road Safety Strategy implemented
    based on using a central database
  • New legal action Objective resposibility and
    zero tolerance
  • Plus new tarffic penalty point system
  • New speed limit for each type of vehicle
  • Higher penalty for using a mobile phones
  • New traffic rules implemented based on More
    legal support to pedetrains and children
  • -

25
Case of Hungary, equipments and tools (2)
  • Made good use of EU funds to improve road network
  • New National Road Safety Strategy implemented
  • Objective resposibility
  • zero tolerance
  • new tarffic penalty point system
  • New and adectave speed limit
  • Higher penalty for using a mobile phones
  • More support to pedetrains and children

26
Case of Hungary, Objective responsiblity
  • Based on law nr. I./1988y
  • New system for sharing of responsibility
  • Key issue I. dedicated main responsibility to
    owner or operator of the vehicle
  • Key issue II. the identify a driver not so
    important
  • since 02.05.2008.
  • New legal action Direct penalty to
    owner/operator
  • Covering (eg.) speed limit, railroad crossing,
    using a highway emergency line, by-pass traffic
    lamp indication ,

27
Case of Hungary, results (1)
  • Decreased trumatic road accident with 9,4
    compare to 2009
  • Fatal accident decreased with 11,8 compare to
    2009
  • Drunken driving decreased with 21,5 compare to
    2009
  • Yearly more than 12000 driving licence cancelled
  • Compare with y2010. and y2001. a fatalities
    decreased with 39

28
Case of Hungary, results (2)Accidents due to
drunken driving2001 2009.
29
Case of Hungary, results (3)Fatalities in road
accidents2001 2009.
30
Case of Hungary, results (4)cumulated1957-2009
31
Case of Hungary, next steps
  • Continious increasing a road side controll (eg
    DG, technical inspection, covered and uncovered
    speed limit check)
  • Develoving and updating a technical background,
    focusing a intensive utilization of central
    database
  • Direct communication with participants of traffic
  • Sharing an experience with another authorities
    and partners

32
Lessons from other countries
  • Czech Republic Over-ambitious target with the
    absence of a credible enforcement system failed
    to bring effects
  • Belgium Separatelly setting targets for 3
    federal regions helped to drive actions at
    relevant level of governance and led to
    significant improvements
  • Scandinavian countries Sub-targets were
    established with the help of economic criteria
    and closely monitored
  • Germany No national target, but comprehensive
    approach at local administrative level bringing
    fruits in long-term
  • Netherlands, UK Targets in terms of number of
    Police controls

33
European perspectives
  • Road Safety Action Plan 2011-2020 under
    preparation
  • Most likely -40 road fatality reduction target
    and separate target for road injuries
  • Most likely separate targets for particular
    road-user groups
  • Benchmarking and data driven policy-making on the
    rise
  • More accountability and professionalism...

34
Special thanks to the following websites
Commission transport website (road, care, driving
licence)http//europa.eu.int/comm/transport/inde
x_en.htmlhttp//ec.europa.eu/transport/road_safet
y http//europa.eu.int/comm/transport/road/index_
en.htmhttp//europa.eu.int/comm/transport/care/in
dex_en.htmhttp//europa.eu.int/comm/transport/hom
e/drivinglicence/ index_en.htm www.baleset-megelo
zes.euwww.etsc.euwww.kti.huwww.bme.huwww.sze.h
uwww.police.huwww.uhasselt.be
www.kozigbirsag.police.hu Used sources
published papers of ETSC, OECD, EU, EC
(2000-2011)
35
Thank you for your attention!
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