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A journalist with 13 years of experience on trade publications covering construction, local government, property, pubs, and transport.
August 14, 2017

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Call for urgent action on vehicle safety standards

A coalition of industry groups and NGOs have called on the UK Government to pledge its support for European Commission plans to improve new vehicle safety standards.

A number of associations published a joint letter and briefing to roads minister Jesse Norman MP on the issue.

Brake, the Association of Car Fleet Operators, Chartered Institution of Highways and Transportation, European Transport Safety Council, Living Streets, the Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety and RoadPeace claim improved minimum vehicle safety standards are needed to reduce deaths and serious injuries on UK roads.

Last year, the European Commission published a list of 19 safety technologies which it is considering to make mandatory.

In its letter, the group urged the minister to support these measures and champion continued improvements under UK legislation following Brexit.

Technologies

The technologies under consideration for new cars includes Automated Emergency Braking, Intelligent Speed Assistance (ISA), an overridable system for helping drivers stick to speed limits, as well as updates to crash testing requirements to protect occupants and people outside vehicles.

The European Commission is also considering measures specifically for lorries, to protect people and foot and bicycles, including improvements to lorry drivers’ direct vision.

Vehicle standards were last updated in 2009 and significant advances in vehicle technology, which have taken place since then, “make it prudent to raise the bar and implement further cost effective life-saving safety measures as standard,” the group said.

The coalition concludes that improved vehicle safety standards are “crucial to ensure the effective delivery of the ‘safe system’ approach adopted by Britain, driving towards the ultimate target of zero road deaths and serious injuries.”

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