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PRESS RELEASE February 20, 2020

Nepal needs additional investment of $879 million for safer roads

STOCKHOLM, February 20, 2020 ¡ª Nepal needs to invest an estimated extra $879 million in road safety over the next decade to halve its road crash fatalities, says a new World Bank report.

Released today at the Third Global Ministerial Conference on Road Safety in Stockholm, the report points to the high death rate on the roads in the eastern subregion¡ªwhich comprises Bhutan, Bangladesh, India, and Nepal¡ªcaused by chronic lack of investment in systemic, targeted, and sustained road safety programs and identifies relevant investment priorities to reverse the trend.

In Nepal, road crash deaths and injuries have been on a sharp upward trajectory since the early 2000s with a fatality rate of 8.59 per 100,000 population in fiscal year 2017-2018 as per official reports.

¡°Years of rapid economic growth in South Asia, followed by a steep rise in vehicle ownership have led to mounting traffic deaths and contributed to lost economic opportunities,¡± said Hartwig Schafer, World Bank Vice President for South Asia. ¡°South Asia¡¯s road safety crisis is unacceptable but preventable. The good news is that South Asian countries recognize the urgent need to protect their people, save lives, and sustain their journey toward greater prosperity. We at the World Bank stand ready to support their efforts.¡±

While urgent national-level actions in countries across the eastern subregion, which accounts for the bulk of South Asia¡¯s population, vehicles, and road crash fatalities, remain a top priority, the report also calls for regional initiatives to make roads and vehicles safer.  

The report emphasizes the need to focus on regional trade corridors where crashes are significant, and roads are unsafe. All categories of road users and vehicle types ¨C animals, pedestrians, bicycles, rickshaws, motorcycles, motorized three-wheelers, cars, minibuses, buses, mini trucks, trucks, and agricultural vehicles ¨C are represented in these corridors with narrow lanes, limited or no shoulders, and inadequate pedestrian facilities.

The road safety conditions on these regional corridors mirror the nature and scale of conditions prevalent on national highways. Crash data collected in a sample of highway sections across Nepal, India, and Bangladesh reveal alarming annual fatality rates ranging from 0.3 to 3 fatalities per kilometer, at a yearly average of 0.87 fatalities per kilometer.

To better monitor the effectiveness of road safety efforts, the report recommends a shared regional initiative to harmonize crash data management and analysis systems across South Asia. Currently, South Asian countries are in varying stages of developing crash data and performance management systems that analyze the underlying factors behind each crash ¨C whether it was defective road infrastructure, faulty vehicle design or human error.

To complement these efforts and to facilitate more rapid and effective knowledge transfer, the report suggests South Asian countries could join the proposed regional road safety observatory for Asia and the Pacific.

¡°Historically, when countries reached motorization levels of between 50¨C100 vehicles per 1,000 people, road crashes became one of the leading causes of death and injuries. Improving road safety was then recognized as a national development priority. This holds important road safety lessons for the South Asia region where the rate of vehicle ownership has doubled over the past decade and remains on an upward trajectory,¡± said Arnab Bandyopadhyay, Lead Transport Specialist at the World Bank, ¡°The report's proposed regional initiatives will go a long way in helping countries improve road safety.¡±


Contacts

Kathmandu
Akash Shrestha
External Affairs Officer
ashrestha9@worldbank.org
Washington
Elena Karaban
ekaraban@worldbank.org
Stockholm
Mauro Azeredo
+1 202-460-2033
mazeredo@worldbank.org
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