Pedestrians may be twice as likely to be hit by electric/hybrid cars

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Photo by cody lannom on Unsplash
Photo by cody lannom on Unsplash

Pedestrians could be twice as likely to be hit by an electric or hybrid car as those powered by diesel or petrol, according to international researchers who looked at UK data between 2013 and 2017. The team suggests one reason may be that electric and hybrid vehicles are quieter than petrol or diesel cars, particularly in urban areas where ambient noise levels are higher. This idea was reinforced by the finding that collisions were three times as likely to happen in urban areas than rural areas. Younger, less experienced drivers are also more likely to own an electric car, the authors add, possibly accounting for some of the higher risk. While there were some shortcomings to this research, including missing data beyond 2018 and no vehicle type listed for a quarter of the data on casualties, the team says the findings should be used to understand and safeguard against future traffic injury risk.

Media release

From: BMJ Group

JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY & COMMUNITY HEALTH 

Externally peer reviewed? Yes
Evidence type: Observational
Subjects: People

Pedestrians may be twice as likely to be hit by electric/hybrid cars as petrol/diesel ones

Risk greater in urban areas, finds study of casualty rates in Great Britain 2013-17
Mitigation of this hazard needed amid phase-out of fossil-fuelled vehicles, urge researchers

Pedestrians may be twice as likely to be hit by an electric or hybrid car as those powered by petrol or diesel, finds a study of 2013-17 casualty rates in Great Britain, and published online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.

The risk is greater in urban areas, and governments must take steps to mitigate this safety hazard as they proceed to phase out fossil fuelled vehicles to improve air quality and curb climate change, urge the researchers.

Road traffic injuries are the leading cause of death for children and young people, and 1 in 4 road traffic deaths are of pedestrians, they note. 

Amid the ongoing shift to electric and hybrid cars, concerns have been raised that these vehicles may pose more of a safety hazard to pedestrians than fossil-fuelled cars because they are quieter, particularly in urban areas where background ambient noise levels are higher.

To explore this further, the researchers compared the differences in pedestrian casualty rates for every 100 million miles of road travel in Great Britain between electric/hybrid and fossil fuelled cars, using Road Safety Data (STATS19).

They estimated annual mileage from National Travel Survey (NTS) data. These only started including hybrid as a vehicle fuel type in 2013 while an archiving glitch has precluded uploading relevant data since 2018—hence the selected study period of 2013-17.

In total, 32 billion miles of electric/hybrid vehicle travel and 3 trillion miles of petrol/diesel vehicle travel were included in the analysis.

Between 2013 and 2017, there were 916, 713 casualties from reported road traffic collisions in Great Britain. Of these, 120,197 were pedestrians, 96, 285 of whom had been hit by a car or taxi. 

Three quarters of these pedestrians—71, 666 (74%)---had been hit by a car or taxi powered by petrol or diesel. Some 1652 (2%) had been hit by an electric or hybrid vehicle. But in nearly 1 in 4 (22, 829; 24%) of the pedestrian casualties the vehicle type code was missing. 

Most collisions occurred in urban areas, a greater proportion of which involved electric or hybrid vehicles than petrol/diesel vehicles: 94% vs 88%. This compares with 6% and 12%, respectively, in rural areas.

Based on these data, the researchers calculate that between 2013 and 2017, the average annual casualty rates of pedestrians per 100 million miles of road travel were 5.16 for electric and hybrid vehicles and 2.40 for petrol and diesel vehicles.

This indicates that collisions with pedestrians were, on average, twice as likely with electric and hybrid vehicles as they were with petrol and diesel vehicles, and 3 times as likely in urban areas than in rural areas, say the researchers.
They acknowledge several caveats to their findings, including the lack of data beyond 2017 and the absence of vehicle coding in nearly a quarter of cases. 

And younger, less experienced drivers are more likely to be involved in a road traffic collision and are also more likely to own an electric car, possibly accounting for some of the observed heightened risk associated with these vehicles, they suggest.

“More pedestrians are injured in Great Britain by petrol and diesel cars than by electric cars, but compared with petrol and diesel cars, electric cars pose a greater risk to pedestrians and the risk is greater in urban environments,” they write. 

“One plausible explanation for our results is that background ambient noise levels differ between urban and rural areas, causing electric vehicles to be less audible to pedestrians in urban areas,” they suggest.

“From a public health perspective, our results should not discourage active forms of transport beneficial to health, such as walking and cycling; rather they can be used to ensure that any potential increased traffic injury risks are understood and safeguarded against,” they emphasise.

To this end, they conclude that the heightened safety risk posed to pedestrians by electric and hybrid cars “needs to be mitigated as governments proceed to phase out petrol and diesel cars.”

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Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health
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Organisation/s: London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, UK
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