The mid-term review of the 3rd European road safety action programme, published on 22 February 2006, points to contrasting situations across EU countries for the period 2001-2004:
- 41,600 people died in road accidents in 2005, down from about 50,000 in 2001 or a 17.5% decrease (figures cover the whole of the EU-25)
- Best progress achieved:
- France: 8,162 to 5,530 deaths (-32%)
- Portugal: 1,670 to 1,294 deaths (-23%)
- Least progress or backward trend:
- Poland: 5,534 to 5,712 deaths (+3%)
- Czech Republic: 1,334 to 1,382 deaths (+4%)
However, progress was described as insufficient by Jacques Barrot, the EU Commission Vice-President in charge of transport policy: "Progress at the current rate will not be sufficient to reduce by 25,000 the number of deaths per year by 2010. At the current pace, Europe will have more than 32,500 deaths on roads by 2010," he pointed out.
Motorcyclists appear to be most at risk, with deaths rising between 2000 and 2003 when elsewhere, the total number of road deaths was falling. Tackling the safety of motorcyclists is now "a matter of urgency," the Commission said.
Besides, country statistics need to be interpreted carefully and put in relation to total population and the number of cars in circulation, the Commission cautioned. The UK for instance performed relatively well compared to countries of similar size even though it made slow progress in percentage terms (3,368 deaths in 2004, down from 3,598 in 2001 or a 6% reduction). Others like Malta are so small that a single casualty has heavy consequences on statistics (deaths fell from 16 in 2001 to 13 in 2004, or a 19% reduction).
No new proposals were immediately put forward with the review, but Barrot recalled that EU legislation remained to be implemented at national level:
- May 2006: safety belt becomes mandatory for all commercial vehicles, "including coaches and minibuses".
- May 2006: digital tachograph becomes mandatory to monitor a truck's speed and journey duration. "I will not accept additional delay," said Barrot who added: "Member states who are late will have to answer before the Court."
- January 2007: special 'blind spot' rear-view mirror become mandatory for every new truck registered.
- Spring 2007: minimum rest time for truck drivers enters into force (maximum 56 driving hours per week) (EurActiv, 3 Feb. 2006).
Meanwhile, promoting new technologies and 'intelligent' cars emerged as a central plank of the Commission's broader road safety strategy.
"Intelligent cars can help solve our key road transport problems: safety, traffic congestion and energy consumption," said Information Society and Media Commissioner Viviane Reding on 21 February as she presented the Commission's new " intelligent car initiative ".
She said existing systems, such as braking assistance (ABS) or electronic stabilising systems (ESP) should be made available to all vehicles more speedily and fitted to vehicles across all class ranges, including cheaper models.
But newer technologies such as lane-departure warning, collision avoidance and active pedestrian protection based on detection and warning should also be promoted, she said.



