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G20 infrastructure investment can save 40,000,000 people The facts Road crashes are the biggest killer of young people aged 5-24 in the world. Road crashes kill and injure an estimated 30-50 million people every year, or more than 100,000 people each day. 31% of all deaths 1 are car occupants, 23% are motorcyclists and 22% are pedestrians. 265,000,000 people will be killed and seriously injured worldwide over the next 15 years. That is more than: the combined populations of Australia, Mexico, South Africa and the UK; the population of Indonesia; or 85% of the US population. G20 countries include some of the best and worst road safety performers. They account for 60% of all global road deaths (760,000 out of 1.24 million per year) or an estimated 8,350,000 deaths and serious 3 injuries a year. Road death and serious injury in G20 countries has an estimated economic cost of $1.5 trillion a year, or 4 an average of 2.8% of each country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The proposed UN Sustainable Development Goals will shape action for the next 15 years. Halving road deaths is one of the draft targets (goal 3.6). Investing in infrastructure to create growth and jobs (goal 9.1) and safe and sustainable transport (goal 11.2) each reinforce the humanitarian, economic and 5 sustainable development opportunity from improved road safety outcomes. 2 What the G20 can achieve The G20 is focussing on investment and infrastructure. Investment in road infrastructure safety improvements will support economic growth, job creation and productivity improvements. Road crashes cost 2-5% of GDP. Investment in safer roads will deliver more than $8 of benefits for every $1 invested. The burden on health, emergency services, social support and business will be lifted. Improving the Star Ratings of high-risk roads across the world has the potential to prevent more than 7 40,000,000 deaths and serious injuries and unlock more than US$5,000 billion of benefits. 6 iRAP’s investment and infrastructure recommendations for G20 leaders Support the proposed UN post-2015 Sustainable Development Goal to halve road traffic deaths. Invest more than 0.1% of GDP per year in targeted road infrastructure safety upgrades that improve the star rating of roads for pedestrians, cyclists, motorcyclists and vehicle occupants worldwide. Adopt a target of “No 1 or 2-star roads by 2030”, which will provide the transparent global policy metric to drive public and private sector investment in safer road infrastructure (e.g. pension funds and Social Impact Bonds). www.irap.org | 1 / 4 The role of safer infrastructure Road infrastructure safety worldwide is poor with more than half of roads assessed by iRAP rating just one or two-stars (out of a 8 possible 5-stars). Crash costs are approximately halved for each incremental improvement in Star 9 Rating. $0.16 $0.14 $0.12 Crash cost $0.10 Vehicle occupant Star Ratings and fatal and serious injury crash costs per vehicle kilometre travelled $0.08 $0.06 $0.04 $0.02 Often more than half of all road deaths $0.00 1-star 2-star 3-star 4-star 5-star happen on less than 10% of a country’s road network. In India in 2013 for example, 33% 10 of deaths occurred on national highways which account for just 3% of all roads. Targeting investment to these high-risk roads can generate large returns. Road crashes are a primary cause of workplace death and injury. and economic competitiveness is significant. Countries leading in road safety already have targets to eliminate one and two-star roads (e.g. 12 Netherlands) or lift national highways to four-stars (e.g. New Zealand). The World Bank and Asian Development Bank are successfully trialling use of Star Ratings targets for all 13 road users in new road designs. Building safer roads is simple. People are killed as pedestrians and cyclists moving along or across the road, or in head-on, run-off road and intersection crashes as vehicle occupants or motorcyclists. All 14 crash types have cost-effective and high return infrastructure solutions. Countries performing well in road safety typically have a higher proportion of travel on safer roads with 15 better Star Ratings. 11 The negative impact on business Policy and investment potential A job-creating worldwide investment in infrastructure safety to improve the Star Rating of roads could save 40,000,000 deaths and serious injuries for an investment of $681 billion (or 0.1% of GDP per year for 10 years). More than $8 of benefit to the economy and health systems will be unlocked for every $1 16 invested. The SLoCaT partnership has recommended a target for “No 1 or 2-star roads by 2030” as part of 17 achieving the proposed UN SDG goal to halve road deaths. G20 countries are the major shareholders and capital providers for the World Bank and other multilateral development banks that fund road projects in low and middle-income countries. Ensuring all Bank funded projects are built to minimum three-star standard will save lives, reduce the burden on health systems and help ensure development is sustainable. The G8 work on Social Impact Bonds, and the UK Government lead on Development Impact Bonds provides a framework for government and pension fund investment in road infrastructure safety 18 improvements. The use of before and after Star Ratings as the performance metric can provide the mechanism to unlock this high-return investment globally. New upgrades can be celebrated immediately as new four and five-star roads are opened to the public. This has the potential to build a transparent and community-wide appreciation of the importance and success of safer roads. www.irap.org | 2 / 4 A business case for G20 and global investment This simple analysis helps to illustrate the 20 year benefits - in terms of deaths and serious injuries prevented and economic savings - that could be achieved by improving the safety of all road users on the highest volume 10% of roads in each country. For more information, visit: http://irap.org/en/about-irap-2/a-business-case-for-safer-roads. Country Population (million) (per 100,000 population) Annual cost of fatalities and serious injuries as a percentage of GDP Potential reduction in fatalities and serious injuries over 20 years Economic benefit of reduction in fatalities and serious injuries over 20 years a (billion) Annual fatalities Benefit cost ratio Argentina 40 12.6 3.1% 168,100 $32.8 9 Australia 22 6.1 1.5% 45,000 $49.8 2 Brazil 195 22.5 5.5% 1,447,700 $339.9 14 Canada 34 6.7 1.7% 75,800 $66.4 2 1,349 20.5 5.0% 9,107,400 $1,340.4 22 237 8.2 1.7% 644,200 $243.5 3 France 63 6.4 1.6% 131,700 $92.6 3 Germany 82 4.7 1.1% 126,400 $91.5 5 1,225 18.9 4.6% 7,623,900 $241.7 7 Indonesia 240 17.7 4.3% 1,400,300 $108.9 25 Italy 61 7.2 1.8% 144,200 $79.0 5 Japan 127 5.2 1.3% 218,600 $150.8 4 Mexico 113 14.7 3.6% 551,600 $108.0 20 Republic of Korea 48 14.1 3.4% 223,900 $107.4 35 Russian Federation 143 18.6 4.6% 876,700 $280.4 19 Saudi Arabia 27 24.8 6.1% 224,400 $91.1 14 South Africa 50 31.9 7.8% 527,800 $65.8 12 Turkey 73 12.0 2.9% 289,000 $61.9 12 United Kingdom 62 3.7 0.9% 75,200 $49.3 4 United States of America 310 11.4 2.8% 1,171,200 $1,083.6 6 G20 Total 4,500 16.9 2.8% 25,073,100 $4,685.1 8 Global Total 6,800 18.1 3.0% 40,458,000 $5,715.2 8 China European Union b India a b billion = 1,000,000,000 Excluding France, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom which are listed separately. www.irap.org | 3 / 4 About iRAP iRAP is a UK registered charity with a vision for a world free of high-risk roads. Charity # 1140357. iRAP acknowledges the generous support of the FIA Foundation and the Road Safety Fund. Contact Rob McInerney iRAP Chief Executive Officer [email protected] +61 405 49 3030 www.irap.org 1 http://www.who.int/violence_injury_prevention/road_safety_status/2013/en/. 2 http://www.irap.org/en/about-irap-3/research-and-technical-papers?download=195:the-business-case-forinvestment-in-road-safety 3 http://www.who.int/violence_injury_prevention/road_safety_status/2013/en/. 4 http://www.irap.org/en/about-irap-2/a-business-case-for-safer-roads. 5 http://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/focussdgs.html. 6 https://www.g20.org/g20_priorities/g20_2014_agenda/investment_and_infrastructure. http://www.irap.org/en/about-irap-2/a-business-case-for-safer-roads. 7 8 http://www.irap.org/en/irap-news/285-vaccines-for-roads 9 See for example: http://www.irap.org/en/about-irap-3/research-and-technicalpapers?download=91:relationship-between-star-ratings-and-crash-costs-the-bruce-highway-australia. 10 http://morth.nic.in/showfile.asp?lid=1465 and http://morth.nic.in/showfile.asp?lid=366. See for example: http://www.bls.gov/iif/oshwc/cfoi/cftb0277.pdf; http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/statistics_explained/index.php/Health_and_safety_at_work_statistics; and http://www.safeworkaustralia.gov.au/sites/SWA/about/Publications/Documents/841/Key-WHS-Statistics2014.pdf. 11 12 http://eurorap.org/partner-countries/netherlands/ and http://www.saferjourneys.govt.nz/assets/Uploads/Safer-Journeys-Action-plan-2013-2015.pdf. 13 See for example: http://www.worldbank.org/projects/P107649/second-karnataka-state-highwayimprovement?lang=en and http://www.makeroadssafe.org/Documents/mrs_safe_roads_for_all.pdf. 14 See for example: http://toolkit.irap.org. 15 See for example http://www.roadsafetyfoundation.org/media/30065/measuring_to_manage.pdf and http://www.roadsafetyfoundation.org/media/30373/how_safe_is_the_srn_final.pdf. 16 http://www.irap.org/en/about-irap-2/a-business-case-for-safer-roads. 17 http://www.slocat.net/sites/default/files/u13/slocat-resultsframework-_25_july.pdf. 18 See for example: https://www.gov.uk/government/groups/social-impact-investment-taskforce and https://www.gov.uk/government/news/uk-development-bonds-will-combat-global-poverty. www.irap.org | 4 / 4