Press Release
ETSC welcomes provisional deal on new vehicle safety standards
26 March 2019
Brussels
– New cars, vans, lorries and buses sold in Europe will be fitted as
standard with a range of new vehicle safety features, starting in 2022,
according to a provisional EU deal on the legislation reached last night
in Strasbourg.
The new rules include requirements for new technologies, such as
Automated Emergency Braking which can detect pedestrians and cyclists,
as well as overridable Intelligent Speed Assistance, to be fitted as
standard for the first time. New lorries will be required to have
improved levels of “direct vision” to give drivers a greater chance of
seeing vulnerable road users such as pedestrians and cyclists around the
vehicle.
The legislation also tackles drink driving, making it easier to retrofit
an alcohol interlock device – a technological solution for tackling
repeat drink driving in use in a number of EU Member States.
New vehicles will also be required to be fitted with Electronic Data
Recorders that store vital data on the car’s status in the moments
immediately before a collision. Such information is vital to
understanding why crashes occur and for preventing future collisions.
Negotiators from the European Parliament and European Commission agreed
with representatives of EU Member State governments last night on the
final shape of the regulations first announced by the European
Commission in May last year. However the negotiated deal is provisional
and still subject to formal votes in the European Parliament and by EU
Member States. Due to European Parliamentary elections in May – this
process could still take several more months.
Commenting on the provisional deal, Antonio Avenoso, Executive Director of the European Transport Safety Council (ETSC) said:
“There have only been a handful of moments in the last fifty years
which could be described as big leaps forward for road safety in
Europe. The mandatory introduction of the seat belt was one, and the
first EU minimum crash safety standards, agreed in 1998 was another. If
yesterday’s agreement is given the formal green light in September, it
will represent another of those moments, preventing 25,000 deaths within
15 years of coming into force.
“Although this legislation was many years in the planning stages,
there has been relatively little time for political discussions over its
final shape. We would like to pay tribute to the MEPs and
representatives of the Commission and Member States that have worked
tirelessly to get a deal done before the big changeover at the European
Parliament and European Commission this summer. In particular the
Romanian EU presidency, European Commissioners Elżbieta Bieńkowska and
Violeta Bulc, and the Polish MEP Róża Thun deserve recognition for their
commitment to seeing this legislation through."
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