Buckling Up To Save Lives Five Decades Of Seat Belt Laws

Buckling Up To Save Lives Five Decades Of Seat Belt Laws

Despite several countries implementing laws for using seat belt in cars, a majority of countries still need to enact appropriate legislation requiring drivers and passengers to wear seat belts, according to the United Nations.

Wearing of seat belts have saved millions of lives, announced the UN agencies on Tuesday, marking half a century of vehicular safety legislation around the world.

“The compulsory wearing of safety belts, as well as helmets for two-wheelers, and increased political commitment to road safety, played a decisive role in the reduction of road deaths throughout Europe from the 1970s onwards,” said Jean Todt, UN Special Envoy for Road Safety.

Using safety belts by front-seat passengers reduces the risk of fatal injuries by 45 to 50 per cent. The risk of death and serious injuries among back-seat occupants reduces by 25 per cent, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

UN REGULATION SAVING LIVES

Technical specifications of seat belt use and installation stem from UN Regulation No. 16, which entered into force in 1970. In the following years, a growing number of countries introduced legislation to make the use of seat belts compulsory.

At present 105 countries have seat belt laws aligned with best practices, according to the latest WHO Global Status Report on Road Safety.

DECLINE IN ROAD FATALITIES

The UN Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) says that seat belts remain the best vehicle safety device to protect passengers from getting severely injured in a crash or getting ejected from the vehicle.

The UNECE said regulation and consumer demand have led to increasingly safe cars in higher income countries over the past several decades. This led to fewer road fatalities, it added. For example, in Europe, total road fatalities decreased by 15 per cent between 2000 and 2010. The same was followed in between 2010 and 2019. In particular, this drop was more significant among car occupants, UNECE said.

According to the International Transport Forum Road Safety Annual Report 2022, the period between 2010 and 2019 saw a marked drop in the number of car occupant road deaths in developed countries. The report noted that reductions of fatalities by more than 30 per cent were recorded in 13 countries.

BUCKLE UP ELSEWHERE

The UNECE said that several countries are yet to enact appropriate legislation requiring drivers and passengers to wear seat belts.

Every year about 1.35 million people die on the roads. A total of 93 per cent of vehicular deaths occur in developing countries.

“We now must work with governments and all relevant industry stakeholders to ensure that people in the developing world enjoy the same level of safety as those in developed countries,” the Special Envoy said.

That means adopting and enforcing laws in line with international standards and providing access to vehicles, both new and used, with appropriately fitted seat belts, he said.

UN REGULATION NO. 16

UN Regulation No. 16 is the only widely internationally recognized requirement for seat belt use in vehicles. It defines the requirements an effective seat belt must comply with and tests for their certification to keep all occupants safe, from children to elderly people.

The UN regulation requires a seat belt to carry an approval mark on the buckle tongue. While other models must display an encircled capital letter E followed by a number that represents the country whose certified authority granted its approval.

Seat belts approved according to Regulation No. 16 are tested under the most severe conditions to endure ageing and to function together with other safety systems, including airbags, as part of the complete vehicle crashworthiness.

Currently, 52 nations have joined the 1958 Agreement on Harmonized Technical UN Regulations for Wheeled Vehicles, which apply Regulation No. 16 as national law. Several other countries worldwide are also applying this regulation with certain changes.

Aside from seat belts, UN regulations also include airbags, electronic stability control, pedestrian protection, and child restraint anchorage points.

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