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Take a care on French roads
June 01, 2010
Thousands of British motorists will be packing cars, caravans and
trailers this week, ready to take the half term holiday in France – the
UK’s top touring destination. But, while they can expect the highest
safety engineering standards in Europe on the autoroutes, the safety of
other popular French touring roads is far lower. British motorists face
risk levels in France last seen on roads at home 15 years ago, according
to a report launched today, commissioned by a consortium of European
touring clubs and safety charities.
How safe are you on French roads? reports on an inspection of
4,300km of popular tourist roads in France. The inspection and
assessment was undertaken in line with the safety rating being adopted
worldwide and pioneered by the European Road Assessment Programme
(EuroRAP). The star rating assesses the risk of the most common causes
of death on the road - collisions at junctions, running off the road, or
hitting oncoming traffic.
France is a major motoring destination for 20 million northern
Europeans annually and 90% of the French take their holidays at home.
• In the last decade, 60,000 people have lost their lives on French
roads
• France is the UK’s biggest road-touring holiday destination
• Death rates on France’s roads today are more than 50% greater than in
Britain and are at levels last seen in Britain 15 years ago
• Alcohol plays a major part in deaths on French road: in 80% of
drink-drive related crashes the driver was more than twice the
blood-alcohol limit
The EuroRAP assessments covered three typical tourist journeys
types in and through France:
“Get me to the sun” tracked 1400km of roads commonly used by
British tourists. This research found that 97% of roads scored 4 or more
stars for safety compared with 50% of the motorway network in the UK.
Commenting on the results, Dr Joanne Hill, Director of the Road
Safety Foundation praises the standards of autoroutes: “While the entire
network has not been inspected, we have covered a large sample. The
results are the most consistently good we have yet seen for motorways
anywhere in Europe. French autoroutes do not have some of the ingrained
flaws in standards of run-off protection that we see in Britain. The
French safety record speaks for itself: autoroutes carry nearly a
quarter of all traffic in France, but see just 6% of all road deaths,
and British drivers can revel in safer roads, lighter traffic and fewer
junctions.”
“My Touring Holiday” inspection covered 1500km of roads which are
popular among tourists driving through Paris, Orleans, chateau country,
Blois, Poitiers, Dordogne, and the Atlantic coast. Here, routes varied
considerably. On single carriageways, nearly 70% scored one or two
stars, and overall in this assessment, 49% of roads scored one or two
stars.
“My Stay in Provence” inspected 1400km around the popular,
picturesque routes recommended by tour guides, including many mountain
roads with limited safe overtaking opportunities, and environmental
constraints on safety engineering. Although dual carriageway sections
rated high scores, they represented only 185km. Overall, more than half
of all roads in this assessment rated one or two stars.
“France is doing a great deal to tackle road casualties,” says Dr
Jo Hill, “More than 20,000 priority junctions have been replaced with
safer roundabouts. Innovative safety engineering is common, for example
with natural look safety barriers in areas of outstanding beauty. French
engineers are clearly trying to make roads less hazardous for
motorcyclists through specially appointed ‘Monsieur Motos’ in highway
departments.
“However, visitors need to be aware that 15% of France’s busier
roads achieve only a one star rating and death rates per head of
population are more than 50% higher than many neighbouring countries. If
France is to catch up with top performing countries then the challenge
is not the skills of its engineers but the size of the country. France
has roughly twice the length of road that needs urgent treatment.”
She continues: “The new French traffic laws are robustly enforced
and deaths are falling. But British drivers in France need to be aware
of the higher risks and can take simple steps to have a relaxing,
carefree holiday by leaving plenty of time and taking frequent breaks.
That way, they can stay alert particularly when turning off the
autoroute onto ordinary single carriageways. Above all, the golden rules
apply: wear seat belts, obey the speed limits and don’t drink and
drive.”
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