The number of deaths on UAE roads fell by two-thirds in the space of a decade, a new study found.
Tighter traffic regulations, awareness campaigns, and improvements in vehicle safety were cited as key to the “remarkable” drop in fatalities from 2010 to 2019.
Research by Injury Prevention, a peer-reviewed publication by the British Medical Journal, revealed the country's fatality rate from road traffic injuries fell from 10 per 100,000 people in 2010 to 7.4 in 2015 and 3.5 in 2019. Researchers used official figures in their analysis.
The study’s authors, from the College of Medical and Health Sciences at UAE University in Al Ain, said the results “indicate the effectiveness” of measures to improve road safety.
“These measures effectively helped to curb speedy driving, tailgating, cell phone use and other forms of careless driving, and to reduce the magnitude and severity of RTI in the UAE,” they wrote.
The study shows that not only road death rates in the UAE have fallen heavily, but also the number of people who were injured but survived.
The non-fatal injury rate was 92.5 per 100,000 people in 2010, 75.2 per 100,000 in 2015, and 40.9 per 100,000 in 2019.
Thomas Edelmann, managing director of Road Safety UAE, said the fall in death rates was “quite remarkable”.
“The UAE government takes the matter very seriously,” he said. “In the ‘UAE Vision 2021’ a target of three fatalities per 100,000 population was announced, which was a catalyst for many government entities and other stakeholders to put in massive efforts to try to reach this.”
The reduction in death rates came, he said, at a time of “massive efforts” to improve safety by the UAE government, vehicle suppliers, media, and initiatives such as his.
Laws around road safety were tightened in 2007 and 2017, with the latter year seeing the introduction of the black points system, under which a person can be banned from driving if they accumulate sufficient points from violations.
Rules around seat belts, using a mobile phone while driving, reckless driving, ignoring traffic lights, and driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol have all been strengthened, with violators risking punishments including fines and, for some offenses, jail time on top of black points.
Other improvements, Mr. Edelmann said, came from the emergency services, through more resources and better response times. Better road infrastructure, education, and data also made a contribution, he added.
Figures provided by Road Safety UAE indicate that the fatality rate per 100,000 vehicles in the UAE fell from 100 in 2006, to 57 in 2010, 32 in 2015, and just 11 in 2021. This data suggests that death rates per vehicle have, in 15 years, dropped nearly 90 percent.
While saying that the various statistics on road safety “are great testimony” to how the country’s roads have become safer, Mr. Edelmann said the challenge remains “the composition of the UAE road users”, who mostly come from the Arab world, Indian subcontinent, other parts of Asia and the West.
“We all come with different driving cultures and it seems not to melt together properly in terms of creating a UAE safety-orientated road culture,” he said. “We still observe more driving against each other rather than driving with each other.
“About 50 percent of fatalities are caused by young drivers aged 18 to 30 and this segment needs a strong focus.”
Further improvements could come, he suggested, from “surprise” road safety monitoring, rather than just fixed radar speed checks, along with average speed checks, and the mandatory inclusion of road safety in the school curriculum.
Previous research indicated that poor road safety practice was a major factor in deaths and serious injuries in the country.
A 2013 study of road accident victims, also by UAE University researchers, found that 98 percent of passengers killed or hospitalized for more than 24 hours were not wearing a seat belts.
Ministry of Interior statistics show that 381 road deaths in the UAE last year were up from the 2020 figure of 256, but that number is likely to have been low because the pandemic reduced traffic levels.
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