A Brief Overview on the Road Safety Approach in Singapore

The report introduces how the Safe System Approach works, with a focus on road infrastructure and road safety engineering best practices from one of the best performing countries in Southeast Asia and the Pacific, Singapore. Singapore roads are not only considered the safest in the region, they rank among the safest globally. Road safety management rules and regulations implemented in the country have resulted in significant strides in managing the effects of collision factors related to roadway design, human behavior, and vehicle attributes. As a result, road safety statistics have shown that fatalities on the Singapore road network have been steadily declining over the past decade. This is leading to a desire on the part of neighboring countries to follow Singapore's example and learn from its experience. In order to mitigate collisions attributed to vehicle inadequacies or defects, one of the measures taken in Singapore was to enforce a strict vehicle import policy. Vehicle imports are permissible from countries that have adopted and comply with recognized high vehicle safety standards. Vehicle safety compliance is particularly focused on 52 items specified by the Land Transport Authority (LTA). In addition to strict vehicle import standards, Singapore enforces a strict vehicle quota system, which regulates the number of vehicles on the road network. Additionally, vehicles are required to undergo frequent inspections. Cars between 3 and 10 years old are required to have a biennial inspection, and cars older than 10 years are required to undergo annual inspections. Furthermore, taxis are required to undergo inspections every six months. Road safety education and driver education are core tenants of Singapore's roads safety strategy. Road safety education is predominately undertaken by the Singapore Traffic Police, but nongovernmental organizations such as the National Security Coordination Secretariat contribute significantly to road safety education in Singapore.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019-10
Subjects:ROAD SAFETY, TRAFFIC COLLISIONS, ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE, SPEED CAMERAS, TRAFFIC CALMING,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/192941576001080307/A-Brief-Overview-on-the-Road-Safety-Approach-in-Singapore
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33085
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spelling dig-okr-10986330852024-08-07T18:59:31Z A Brief Overview on the Road Safety Approach in Singapore World Bank ROAD SAFETY TRAFFIC COLLISIONS ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE SPEED CAMERAS TRAFFIC CALMING The report introduces how the Safe System Approach works, with a focus on road infrastructure and road safety engineering best practices from one of the best performing countries in Southeast Asia and the Pacific, Singapore. Singapore roads are not only considered the safest in the region, they rank among the safest globally. Road safety management rules and regulations implemented in the country have resulted in significant strides in managing the effects of collision factors related to roadway design, human behavior, and vehicle attributes. As a result, road safety statistics have shown that fatalities on the Singapore road network have been steadily declining over the past decade. This is leading to a desire on the part of neighboring countries to follow Singapore's example and learn from its experience. In order to mitigate collisions attributed to vehicle inadequacies or defects, one of the measures taken in Singapore was to enforce a strict vehicle import policy. Vehicle imports are permissible from countries that have adopted and comply with recognized high vehicle safety standards. Vehicle safety compliance is particularly focused on 52 items specified by the Land Transport Authority (LTA). In addition to strict vehicle import standards, Singapore enforces a strict vehicle quota system, which regulates the number of vehicles on the road network. Additionally, vehicles are required to undergo frequent inspections. Cars between 3 and 10 years old are required to have a biennial inspection, and cars older than 10 years are required to undergo annual inspections. Furthermore, taxis are required to undergo inspections every six months. Road safety education and driver education are core tenants of Singapore's roads safety strategy. Road safety education is predominately undertaken by the Singapore Traffic Police, but nongovernmental organizations such as the National Security Coordination Secretariat contribute significantly to road safety education in Singapore. 2019-12-23T21:48:27Z 2019-12-23T21:48:27Z 2019-10 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/192941576001080307/A-Brief-Overview-on-the-Road-Safety-Approach-in-Singapore https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33085 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic ROAD SAFETY
TRAFFIC COLLISIONS
ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE
SPEED CAMERAS
TRAFFIC CALMING
ROAD SAFETY
TRAFFIC COLLISIONS
ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE
SPEED CAMERAS
TRAFFIC CALMING
spellingShingle ROAD SAFETY
TRAFFIC COLLISIONS
ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE
SPEED CAMERAS
TRAFFIC CALMING
ROAD SAFETY
TRAFFIC COLLISIONS
ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE
SPEED CAMERAS
TRAFFIC CALMING
World Bank
A Brief Overview on the Road Safety Approach in Singapore
description The report introduces how the Safe System Approach works, with a focus on road infrastructure and road safety engineering best practices from one of the best performing countries in Southeast Asia and the Pacific, Singapore. Singapore roads are not only considered the safest in the region, they rank among the safest globally. Road safety management rules and regulations implemented in the country have resulted in significant strides in managing the effects of collision factors related to roadway design, human behavior, and vehicle attributes. As a result, road safety statistics have shown that fatalities on the Singapore road network have been steadily declining over the past decade. This is leading to a desire on the part of neighboring countries to follow Singapore's example and learn from its experience. In order to mitigate collisions attributed to vehicle inadequacies or defects, one of the measures taken in Singapore was to enforce a strict vehicle import policy. Vehicle imports are permissible from countries that have adopted and comply with recognized high vehicle safety standards. Vehicle safety compliance is particularly focused on 52 items specified by the Land Transport Authority (LTA). In addition to strict vehicle import standards, Singapore enforces a strict vehicle quota system, which regulates the number of vehicles on the road network. Additionally, vehicles are required to undergo frequent inspections. Cars between 3 and 10 years old are required to have a biennial inspection, and cars older than 10 years are required to undergo annual inspections. Furthermore, taxis are required to undergo inspections every six months. Road safety education and driver education are core tenants of Singapore's roads safety strategy. Road safety education is predominately undertaken by the Singapore Traffic Police, but nongovernmental organizations such as the National Security Coordination Secretariat contribute significantly to road safety education in Singapore.
format Report
topic_facet ROAD SAFETY
TRAFFIC COLLISIONS
ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE
SPEED CAMERAS
TRAFFIC CALMING
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title A Brief Overview on the Road Safety Approach in Singapore
title_short A Brief Overview on the Road Safety Approach in Singapore
title_full A Brief Overview on the Road Safety Approach in Singapore
title_fullStr A Brief Overview on the Road Safety Approach in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed A Brief Overview on the Road Safety Approach in Singapore
title_sort brief overview on the road safety approach in singapore
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019-10
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/192941576001080307/A-Brief-Overview-on-the-Road-Safety-Approach-in-Singapore
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33085
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