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4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT Ministry of Communications Government Of Pakistan Road Safety Audit A Promising Approach For Pakistan

4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

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Page 1: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/20071

atNational Road Safety

ConferenceKarachi24th April, 2007 by:

Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE

Executive DirectorNATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

Ministry of CommunicationsGovernment Of Pakistan

Road Safety AuditA Promising

Approach For Pakistan

Road Safety AuditA Promising

Approach For Pakistan

Page 2: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/20072

Presentation Overview• Road Safety- A Global Issue• Economic and social effect• What is a road safety audit?• Why do we need RSAs?• RSA Process• When do we conduct RSAs?• RSA Team Composition• RSA Cost and Benefits• Barriers in RSA implementations in Pakistan• Recommendations and the way ahead • Conclusion

Page 3: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/20073

Road Safety- A Global Issue

About 1.2 million people die in road crashes every year .

Leading cause of death among young people between 10-24 years. Almost 85% of the road deaths occur in Low-Middle

level courtiers. Poor are disproportionately affected, with most of the

victims being pedestrian, bicyclist, motorcyclists and passenger of public transport riders and with more than half of them between ages of 15 to 44 years.

Road crashes have serious social and economic implications.

Direct economic cost for road crashes is US$5I8 billion globally- and US$65 billion for low-income countries.

Page 4: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/20074

Road Safety- A Global Issue

(Source: 1998 World Disasters Report: International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, and TRL, UK.)

Page 5: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

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0

2000

4000

6000

8000

10000

12000

14000

16000

18000

Fatal and Non-Fatal Crashes

Reported Fatal and Non-Fatal Crashes In Pakistan

Source: National Police Bureau

Page 6: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/20076

Economic Cost

Economic cost of road crashes and injuries is estimated to be 1.5% of the GNP for developing countries.

111.6 billion rupees for Pakistan.

Page 7: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/20077

Social Cost

• The mortality rate due to RTC in South East Asia is 18.6 per 100,000 population, hence, the estimated fatalities per year in Pakistan are about 25,000 .

• National Injury Survey of Pakistan conducted in 1997 of serious injuries are 41.2 per 1000 persons per year. Road Traffic Injuries (RTI) was the most common cause (36%).

• Estimated injuries in Pakistan are 2 million per year• Study in Bangladesh raveled the 32% fatalities are

of head of the family. • The loss of earning head and medical bills can have

a ruinous effect on a family’s finance.

Page 8: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/20078

Road Trafic Injuries

, 36.30%

Exposure to inanimate

objects , 28%

Falls, 23%

Exposure to animate

objects, 3%

Violence,2.30%

Others, 8.40%

Road Trafic Injuries Exposure to inanimate objects Falls Exposure to animate objectsViolence Others

Distribution of Injuries by Causes in Pakistan

Source:- National Action Plan for Prevention and Control of Non-Communicable Diseases and Heath Promotion In Pakistan (Page-90)

Page 9: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/20079

What Engineering Sector can do

about Road Safety Problem?

Page 10: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200710

What is a Road Safety Audit

A Road Safety Audit is a formal examination of future and existing roadway, in which an independent and qualified audit team reports on safety issues.

Page 11: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200711

A road safety audit also…

• Considers the safety of all road users

• Examines the interaction of project elements

• May proactively consider mitigation measures

Page 12: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200712

Objective of RSA

• The objectives of road safety audit are to identify potential safety risks for road users and to ensure that measures to eliminate or reduce the risks are fully considered

Page 13: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200713

Road Safety Audit Is:

• Focused on road safety. • A formal examination. • Proactive in nature. • Conducted by a multidisciplinary team (typically

3-5 auditors). • Conducted by an audit team that is independent

of the design team. • Conducted by an audit team that is adequately

qualified, both individually and as a team. • Broad enough to consider the safety of all road

users and road facilities. • Qualitative in nature.

Page 14: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200714

Road Safety Audit Is Not!

• Not a means to evaluate, praise or critique design work. • Not a means of ranking or justifying one project over

another. • Not a means of rating one design option over another. • Not a redesign of a project. • Not a crash investigation or crash data analysis (although

the crash history of an existing road is reviewed to make sure that previous crash patterns have been addressed).

• Not a design quality control or standard compliance check.

Page 15: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200715

Why do we need RSAs?

• Rapid increase in vehicle ownership have placed considerable pressure on the existing road networks

• Relatively few road-related safety issues are identified in collision reports.

• Road designs need to anticipate and accommodate common driver errors.

• Easier to design and build safer roads than to modify some entrenched driver behaviors.

• RSA offers a multidisciplinary preventive approach and can be successfully applied on roadway design project or on an existing roadway.

Page 16: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200716

Benefits of RSA

• Safer roadway through road crash prevention and road crash severity reduction..

• A proactive approach to road safety as it can address road safety issues even before road crashes occur.

• Foster a safety conscious design among owner and designer.

• More explicit consideration of the safety needs of vulnerable road users.

• Cross fertilization between Specialist within a highway agency (e.g. Design, Maintenance, Traffic etc.)

• Can be performed at locations where no crash data is available such as on newly built roadway.

Page 17: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200717

Benefits of RSA (Contd)• Allow for a more detailed and systematic review of

field condition by utilizing detailed prompt list.• Multisectoral RSA team brings diversified skills and

experience of identifying road safety issues other then engineering such as enforcement and road user behaviors issues.

• May help produce designs that reduce the number and severity of crashes.

• May reduce costs by identifying safety issues and correcting them before projects are built.

• Promote awareness of safe design practices.• Integrate multimodal safety concerns.• Consider human factors in all facets of road project.

Page 18: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

18

RSA Process

Page 19: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200719

RSA include eight steps

• Identify project or existing road to be audited. • Select RSA Team • Conduct a pre-audit meeting to review project

information • Perform field reviews under various conditions • Conduct audit analysis and prepare report of

findings • Present audit findings to Project Owner/Design

Team• Prepare formal response• Incorporate findings into the project when

appropriate

Page 20: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200720

Page 21: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200721

RSA Team

• Independent• Experienced• Multidisciplinary

Page 22: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200722

Composition Of RSA Team

• Road Safety Specialist • Traffic Operations Engineer • Road Design Engineer • Local Contact Person • Other areas of specialty

Page 23: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200723

RSA Prompt List

• An effective tool for RSA team to identify safety issues and to ensure that they do not overlook something important

• The prompt lists may also be used by designers to help them identify potential safety issues proactively as they develop their design.

• They are not a substitute for knowledge and experience; rather, they are an aid in the application of knowledge and experience.

Page 24: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200724

When do we conduct RSAs?• Pre-construction:

– Land Use/Master Planning phase

– planning / feasibility– preliminary (draft) design– detailed design

• Construction:– work zones– pre-opening

• Post-construction/operational:– existing roads

Page 25: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200725

Land Use/ Master Planning Phase RSA

• Ensure trip reduction measures are incorporated.

• Viable alternative to private motorized transportation are planned and incentives are build in to encourage people to switch from higher risk mode to lower risk mode.

• Efficient road network is planned where shortest or quickest routes coincide with the safest route.

• Ensure Public facilities those expect to generate heavy pedestrian activities such as schools and masajids should not be located along high speed arteries.

Page 26: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200726

Planning Stage RSA

• Deals with traffic safety aspects of the initial design and

• Choice of route alignment, number and types of junctions, spacing of intersections/interchanges, cross section, multi-mode transportation connections, service to local communities and facilities covered in this phase.

Page 27: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200727

Preliminary Design Stage RSA

• Examines the general alignment, cross- section, and proposed layout of junctions.

• The RSA suggestions may include: changes to access points, horizontal and/or vertical alignments, provision of a median, lane and shoulder width, provision of bicycle lanes and sidewalks, channelization, landscaping, lighting, etc.

Page 28: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200728

Detailed Design Stage RSA

• The audit team's last opportunity to review the design before it is finalized and construction begins.

• Efforts to undertake major physical changes in the design at this stage may be both time-consuming and expensive, and may delay project tendering.

• The focus of the RSA is on examining the detailed design of junctions, proposed road markings, roadside furniture, and proposed alignment to identify potential hazards resulting from adverse combinations of design elements (e.g., vertical and horizontal alignment).

Page 29: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200729

Construction Phase Road Safety Audits

• Work Zone Traffic Control Plan RSAs. • Changes in Design During Construction

RSAs. • Pre-opening RSAs.

Page 30: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200730

RSA of Work Zone Traffic Control Plan

• RSA could be done before the project is tendered to construction, before the work zone is open to traffic, and/or after it is open.

• safety of all temporary roadways and transition areas

• appropriateness of all traffic control devices for whole day and night conditions.

• think about the other road users besides passenger automobile operators

Page 31: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200731

Pre-Opening Stage RSA

• Offer another opportunity for the team to consider the safety aspects of the design before the facility is opened to the public.

• Review must be comprehensive and thorough including inspections both at day and night conditions.

• The RSA suggestions will likely focus on changes to illumination, signs, delineation, pavement markings, roadside barriers, removal or protection of fixed object hazards and minor structural changes (e.g., addition of a wheelchair ramp).

Page 32: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200732

Existing Roads RSA

• The real objective for this type of RSA is to identify road safety issues for different road users that might result in a crash. For this reason, RSAs of existing roads are proactive.

• Available crash data are used to validate RSA results and make sure that existing safety problems are not overlooked.

• RSAs of existing roads may be conducted even if crash data is not available.

• It cover area of interventions, such as enforcement and education to target certain risky behavior identified.

Page 33: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200733

Costs of Road Safety Audit

• The Audit costs (mainly the time of the auditors/team)

• Redesign costs if any • Any increased project cost through

identified remedial works

Page 34: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200734

Potential Benefits

• Savings in time and cost by correcting the problem at early stage.

• Reductions in the number of crashes and the consequent savings in road crash-related costs.

• Reductions in possible litigation costs.• Saving in cost of congestion related to

road crashes

Page 35: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200735

Benefits To Cost Ratio Of RSA

• Scotland has estimated a benefit: Cost (B/C) ratio of 15:1

• New Zealand has estimated the ratio to be closer to 20:1.

• These are the B/C ratio in developed countries where road safety engineering practices are much better as compare to developing courtiers. B/C ratio of RSA in Pakistan is expected to be much higher.

Page 36: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200736

Barriers in A Successful Implementation of RSA in

Pakistan• In highway agencies, Road safety is NOT a high

priority when it comes to allocating financial and human resources.

• No established Safety Design Standards.• Lack of Institutional capacity in Road Safety and

Road Safety Champions within highway agencies.• No formal coordination and data sharing among

agencies on road safety.• Unavailability of trained Traffic Operation Engineers

and Road Safety Auditors. • Lack of training and educational opportunities to

road safety professional.• Dependency on high cost international Consultants.

Page 37: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200737

Recommendations And The Way Ahead

• Develop training program for RSA.• Traffic Engineering and Road Safety Courses should

be taught both at undergraduate and graduate level in Pakistan universities.

• Establish Regional multi-sector Road Safety Coordinating Committee who could overview major RSA Project.

• Develop database for RSA findings particularly for design phase and share it with other relevant agencies to avoid these design shortfall in future project and utilize the same to improve road design standards.

• RSA should be made mandatory for all projects costing Rs. 10 Million or more.

Page 38: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200738

• Establish Traffic Engineering & Safety Directorate

• National Policy on Road Safety should be made covering both preventive and post-crash aspects of Road Safety encompassing initiatives such as RSA.

• RSA procedure should be developed and updated regularly with input from highway agencies.

• Designate a monitory organization to perform Quality Assurance/Quality Control on major RSAs.

Recommendations And The Way Ahead

Page 39: 4/24/2007 1 at National Road Safety Conference Karachi 24 th April, 2007 by: Mr. Aizaz Ahmed. PE, PTOE Executive Director NATIONAL ROAD SAFETY SECRETARIAT

4/24/200739

Conclusion

• RSA is a formal systematic procedure that translates traffic safety knowledge and experience into safe planning, design and operation of roadways. Through application of RSA, we can design and maintain our roads considering the needs of all road users with focus on reducing potential risks and hence making our roadways safer.