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Connectivity and Competitiveness For Sustainable Lives: 66th ECE Commission Geneva, 14-16 April 2015

The document summarizes a presentation given by David Ward, Secretary General of the Global New Car Assessment Programme (Global NCAP) on promoting global vehicle safety standards. Some key points: 1) Global NCAP advocates applying minimum UN crash test standards and safety technologies like electronic stability control to all new vehicles globally by 2020 to help achieve the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety goal of reducing road deaths by 50% from current forecasts. 2) Applying minimum standards can cost less than $200 per vehicle and bring economies of scale, yet millions of new vehicles currently fail to meet these standards. 3) Stronger regulatory push and consumer information on safety are needed, especially in rapidly motorizing low and middle

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
28 views

Connectivity and Competitiveness For Sustainable Lives: 66th ECE Commission Geneva, 14-16 April 2015

The document summarizes a presentation given by David Ward, Secretary General of the Global New Car Assessment Programme (Global NCAP) on promoting global vehicle safety standards. Some key points: 1) Global NCAP advocates applying minimum UN crash test standards and safety technologies like electronic stability control to all new vehicles globally by 2020 to help achieve the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety goal of reducing road deaths by 50% from current forecasts. 2) Applying minimum standards can cost less than $200 per vehicle and bring economies of scale, yet millions of new vehicles currently fail to meet these standards. 3) Stronger regulatory push and consumer information on safety are needed, especially in rapidly motorizing low and middle

Uploaded by

siva borra
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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66th ECE Commission

Geneva, 14-16 April 2015

Connectivity and Competitiveness for Sustainable Lives


Sustainable Connectivity Includes Safe Mobility Which Also Requires Safe Vehicles

Presentation by: David Ward , Secretary General, Global New Car Assessment Programme
UN Decade of Action for Road Safety

The Decade’s goal is to ‘stabilize and then


reduce the level of road fatalities’ equivalent
to a 50% reduction in the forecast level of
fatalities by 2020. This would avoid 5 million
deaths, 50 million injuries . The Decade is
supported by a Global Plan with five pillars:

1. Building Management Capacity


2. Encouraging Safer User Behaviour
3. Building Safer Vehicles
4. Building Safer Roads
5. Improving Post Crash Care

The Decade Plan includes seven recommended


activities in ‘pillar three’ to promote vehicle safety;
such as applying minimum crash test standards
and promoting NCAPs in all world regions. This was
endorsed by the UN GA in a resolution in April 2014.
ECE - Promoting Global Vehicle Safety Standards

General Assembly Resolution 68/269


Improving global road safety, April 2014

Reaffirms the role and importance of


the United Nations legal instruments
on road safety, such as…the 1958 and
1998 agreements of the World Forum
for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations,
in facilitating road safety at the global,
regional and national levels, and
encourages Member States that have
not yet done so to consider becoming The most important car safety UN Regulations are:
contracting parties and, beyond
accession, applying, implementing and Reg. 14 Seat belt anchorages
promoting their provisions or safety Reg. 16 Safety belts & restraints
regulations… Reg. 94 Frontal collision
Reg. 95 Lateral collision
Reg.13H (GTR 8) Electronic stability control
Reg.127 (GTR 9) Pedestrian protection
Vehicle Safety’s Winning Formula:
Regulatory Push & Demand Pull

In high income countries the combination of


safety standards and consumer information
have made passenger cars safer than ever
before. This is the positive result of “regulatory
push” and “demand pull”.

The challenge now is to extend this progress to


the rapidly motorising low and middle income
countries which now account 50% of car sales
and production…and over 90% of road fatalities.

Today millions of new cars sold in low and


middle income countries fail to meet minimum
UN crash test standards, have no air bags, and
no electronic stability control (ESC).
Changing Geography of the Global Car Market

Top 10 Car Producing


Countries/regions 2013
Crash Worthiness: Front & Side Occupant Protection

Crash tests for front and side impact are the


most important assessment tools for occupant
protection; and are used both in legislation
and consumer information programmes.

The frontal impact simulates a car to car crash


in which the test vehicle hits a barrier that
replicates the soft front end of the other
vehicle. The impact is ‘offset’ with a 40%
overlap.

The UN Reg. 94 test speed is 56 km/h whilst


NCAP tests usually use 64 km/h (the speed
at which fatalities are most likely).

The side impact test uses a trolley that hits the


vehicle just above the door sill area at 50 km/h.
Crash Avoidance: First Generation ‘eSafety’ Technologies
Three key crash avoidance systems are today’s priority
technologies for passenger cars, buses, commercial
vehicles and motor cycles:

Electronic Stability Control (ESC) anti-skid system


with capacity to reduce up to 40% of run-off road crashes.
Now mandatory in most high income countries.

Autonomous Emergency Braking (AEB) uses laser &


radar to automatically apply the brakes if the driver
does not react and can cut collisions at low speed by
20%. Pedestrian systems are also appearing and will
become an important injury prevention technology.

Motorcycle Anti-lock Brakes (ABS) helps reduce


stopping distances. Motorcycles equipped with ABS
have rate of fatal crashes 37 per cent lower than same
models without.
Democratizing Car Safety: A Road Map for Safer Cars 2020
• Calls for the ‘democratisation ‘of car safety by the
combination of stronger consumer information and
universal application of minimum UN standards for
crash protection and avoidance.

• Proposes ten key recommendations including the


phased application by 2020 to all new cars of the
UN’s front, side ,and pedestrian impact crash tests
and the anti-skid system, electronic stability control.

• These actions, together with measures promoting


safer roads and road users, are needed to meet the
UN Decade of Action target to cut forecast road
deaths in 2020 by 50%; and also contribute to the
post 2015 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
which are likely to include road safety and a new
casualty reduction target.
Connectivity and Competitiveness for Safe Mobility
• The drive for safer vehicles is both affordable and
necessary to achieve UN sustainable mobility goals
by 2030. Meeting minimum crash standards can cost
less than US $200 per vehicle.

• The growth of ‘eSafety’ technologies will require


further regulatory support and action to promote
their application in rapidly motorising regions.

• Universal implementation of UN standards for crash


protection and avoidance will bring economies of
scale, reduce cost, and promote fair competition .

• The UNECE serves as the custodian of the global motor


vehicle regulatory system and this role needs stronger
support and recognition.

• All UN Member States (especially vehicle producers)


should use it to promote safer mobility worldwide.
Thank You!

Global NCAP is supported by:

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