posted on 2009-02-12, 11:02authored byPete Thomas, Andrew MorrisAndrew Morris, George Yannis, Petros Evgenikos, Philippe Lejeune, Martijn A. Vis, Katalijn Ritsema van Eck, Gilles Vallet, Heikki Jahi, Emmanuelle Dupont
In 2004 there were over 43,000 people who were killed on the roads of the 25
member states of the European Union (EU), additionally around 3.3 million people
were injured1. The costs to society exceeded €180 billion which is around twice the
annual budget of the European Commission and 2% of EU GDP. In 2001 the
European Commission adopted a target of reducing fatalities by 50% within a
decade and identified several areas where it could make a direct contribution within
the constraints of subsidiarity. The target was reaffirmed in 2003 in the Road Safety
Action Programme that provided further detail about actions it planned to introduce. A
key element in the Programme concerned the development of a new European Road
Safety Observatory to gather data and knowledge to inform future safety policies.
The development of the Observatory was to be undertaken by the Sixth Framework
funded project “SafetyNet”. This paper describes the structure of the Observatory
and the progress in developing new EU-wide accident data information within
SafetyNet.
History
School
Design
Citation
THOMAS, P. ... et al, 2006. The New European Road Safety Observatory – SafetyNet. IN: 10th PRI International Road Safety World Congress, 27-29th March, Abu Dabi, United Arab Emirates
Publisher
La Prévention Routière Internationale
Version
AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Publication date
2006
Notes
This conference paper is also available at: http://www.lapri.org/X_PRI_World_Congress/PROGRAMME_LECTURERS.htm