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New investigation team to probe causes of deadly smart motorway crashes

Collisions on motorways with the hard shoulder removed will fall under the remit of the Road Safety Investigation Branch.

Neil Lancefield
Wednesday 29 June 2022 07:32 EDT
Crashes on smart motorway and by cars using autonomous technology are set to be investigated by a new independent body focused on road safety (Steve Parsons/PA)
Crashes on smart motorway and by cars using autonomous technology are set to be investigated by a new independent body focused on road safety (Steve Parsons/PA) (PA Archive)

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Crashes on smart motorways and by cars using autonomous technology are set to be investigated by a new independent body focused on road safety.

The Road Safety Investigation Branch (RSIB) launched by the Department for Transport (DfT) will examine collisions on all types of UK roads.

Similar stand-alone organisations already exist to investigate air, maritime and rail accidents, but significantly more people are killed on roads than other modes of transport.

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There have been long-standing fears about the safety of smart motorways following fatal incidents where vehicles stopped in live lanes were hit from behind.

The RSIB will not analyse every road crash but Steve Gooding, director of the RAC Foundation, told the PA news agency it must focus on “recurring issues” such as “concerns about collisions on motorways where the hard shoulder has been turned into a running lane”.

A recent RAC poll of 2,652 UK drivers suggested that 62% believe hard shoulders should be reintroduced across the motorway network.

National Highways, the Government-owned company responsible for motorways and major A roads in England, insists smart motorways are “our safest roads” in terms of the number of serious or fatal casualties on them.

A specialist team of inspectors is being recruited for the RSIB to investigate crashes on all types of UK roads.

The branch will be independent and will be looking to learn lessons

Steve Gooding, RAC Foundation

Their role will be to find out why collisions happened and make safety recommendations aimed at organisations such as the DfT and police forces.

They will also provide insight into trends relating to new technologies which could include self-driving vehicles, e-scooters and electric cars.

Accident investigation branches do not replace police inquiries as they are not responsible for identifying blame or liability.

Provisional DfT figures show there were 1,560 fatalities on Britain’s roads last year.

There was no significant fall in the annual number of road deaths from 2012 until coronavirus lockdowns led to a huge reduction in traffic in 2020.

Roads minister Baroness Vere said: “The UK may have some of the safest roads in the world, but tragedies still happen and any injury or death on our road network is one too many.

“That’s why we’re establishing the Road Safety Investigation Branch, so we can boost safety for road users even further and also bring safety measures in line with other modes of transport and the future of travel.”

Mr Gooding said: “The job of investigators will be to look for background themes and patterns that link a number of collisions and then recommend actions that could prevent them repeating.

“This is about the whole road transport system. The new branch could decide to look at anything, from the impact of pressure on commercial drivers to meet deadlines to the way we use smart motorways and all things in between.

“The key is that the branch will be independent and will be looking to learn lessons, not point the finger of blame.”

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