The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Dr Matts Belin
On The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Dr Matts Belin
Lisa Owen: Welcome back. After
years of declining, our road toll is on the way up again.
323 people have died so far this year already. Just five
fewer in the whole of last year and more than in 2015. Now,
Auckland council have brought a Swedish expert to New
Zealand to explain a new approach – Vision Zero. Dr Matts
Belin joins me now.
Hello.
Dr Matts Belin:
Thank you for having me. Thank you.
Our deaths
on the roads, fatalities, seven people die per 100,000. What
do you think of that figure? Is it
high?
From an international
perspective, it’s something in the high income countries
that’s quite good if you compare with the low income
countries, for example. But when Sweden adopted this Vision
Zero in 1997 - so we celebrated the 20th anniversary - when
we started with our programme, we had around seven
fatalities per 100,000, but now we have less than three.
2.7, actually.
So you’ve managed to halve
the number of people dying in fatal
accidents.
Yeah, yeah.
Absolutely.
So it’s
possible?
It’s
possible.
What would we need to do to change
that number in New Zeal and? Do we have to drop the speed
limit?
Well, it’s
important to see that safety’s a very… you have to have
a system-wide perspective on safety. When we started to work
with Vision Zero in the late ‘90s, you start with a kind
of ethical imperative that it can never be accepted that
people get killed and serious injury in the traffic, but
Vision Zero is also a new strategy. It differs from the
traditional way that we work with safety. In the traditional
approach, you tried to create the perfect human being who is
doing the right thing all the time, and you put the ultimate
responsibility of safety on us as individual road users. But
in a Vision Zero approach, you don’t think that you can
create a perfect human being and you have to accept that you
have young people, you have old people, you have all kinds
of people using this transport system, and you have to
accommodate for them because people make
mistakes.
So you accept that people make
mistakes and instead of concentrating just on the people,
you concentrate on the engineering and design
more.
Absolutely. That is
one of the important things because you would like to
control for harmful energy, for example.
So we
in New Zealand concentrate very much on drivers’
behaviour, educating them about using their cell phones,
about speeding, but do you think we should just accept that
some people are always going to be bad drivers, some people
are always going to use their phones, some people are always
going to speed?
Yeah,
absolutely. At least, that is what our Vision Zero is about.
It’s a new philosophy. It’s a new strategy to work with
safety, and a good thing, because when it was adopted in
1997, it was only a piece of paper, you know? And
implementation is a different story. We have been able to go
from an idea to implementation. So when you go to Sweden
now, compare how it looked like in the late ‘90s and
nowadays, you will see a tremendous change – both in the
rural areas and also in the urban
areas.
Let’s talk about specific things. On
many New Zealand roads where we can go 100km/h, the traffic
is coming at each other and there’s nothing between the
cars. There’s no physical barrier. Under your
system…?
So we start with
the knowledge now that if you are in a modern car and you
crash with another modern car, up to 80km is quite safe but
over 80km, you will have a very steep increase of the risk
to get killed or seriously injured. So that’s why when we
design our rural network now, if we would like higher speed
than 80km, we have to do something about head-on collisions.
Now we have a large programme with a large network with ‘2
plus 1’ road where we have a middle barrier so we can
allow higher speed on this road but we eliminate the head-on
collisions. Those roads are now 90% safer than they used to
be.
What about cyclists? Should cyclists are
cars ever share the
road?
Well, the first thing
and the important thing is to separate of course. But in an
urban area, you have lots of interaction between pedestrians
and cyclists and so on, and when you design the urban area,
you have to consider that situation. In Sweden now, we aim
for 30km in those intersections so you will see lots of
roundabouts, lots of speed bumps and that sort of thing
because we would like to make it safe for the unprotected
road users.
To be clear, if cyclists and cars
are sharing, you would have some kind of physical
separation, and in the cities, you’re down to
30km/h.
Yeah. At least in
the conflict zones, where you’re in the intersections and
that sort of thing. We aim for 30km or
40km.
How do drivers react to that? Because
when I told the people in the studio ‘30km/h’, they were
like, ‘too slow’.
Yeah.
But you have to realise that if you get hit by a car at
50km, the risk that you get killed is more than 80%. If you
get hit by a car at 30km, the risk is less than 10% so
it’s a dramatic difference between 30km or 40km or 50km,
and we, as a driver, don’t understand this. You need to
put lots of responsibility on us as system designers and we
need to take more responsibility to make sure that we have a
safe system for all road users.
People
listening to this, even people who think this is a good
idea, will probably think ‘this sounds very expensive’.
Is it?
Well, it will cost
money of course to design things and you have to be
persistent and you have to have long-term strategies. But
face it. When it comes to a rural area, for example, if you
build a motorway in Sweden it costs around one billion per
saved life so it’s very expensive.
One
billion per saved
life?
Yeah, But these ’2
plus 1’ roads, when we started to invest in them, they
cost only 30 million per saved life, so it very much depends
on how you’re using your resources and how you work within
the transport sector, I would say.
So if we
were to adopt this approach in New Zealand, how long do you
think it would be before we started to see a result in the
number of deaths?
You need
to work both in the short-term and in the long-term, but the
long-term starts today so that’s important. But in the
short-term, you probably will need lots of policing,
actually, to get control of the situation. But what we have
seen in Sweden now, because the growth of fatalities in many
Western countries now because of the economic activity
starts to increase again. In Sweden, due to that, we have
done so much with the safe system. We don’t feel the same
pressure that we used to do, so it’s extremely important
both to work in the short-term and in the long-term
perspective.
It’s very interesting to talk
to you this morning, Dr Belin. Thanks for joining me this
morning. And if you want to hear more about ‘Vision
Zero’, Matts Belin will be speaking at an event in
Auckland on Wednesday.
Transcript provided by Able. www.able.co.nz