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Spain was among the top countries for road safety with 36 fatalities for every million inhabitants, according to a European Commission report released yesterday. Spain was among six EU countries with fewer than 40 fatalities per million inhabitants and showed greater improvement compared to other countries, according to the report.
Though the number of road deaths remained constant at 36 deaths per million inhabitants for both 2013 and 2014, Spain has seen a reduction in fatalities by 32 percent since 2010, when the country reported 53 deaths per million.
Across Europe, the level of change was small, with overall road fatalities decreasing by 1 percent between 2013 and 2014, compared to a drop of 8 percent between 2012 and 2013. “Following two years of solid decreases in the number of people killed on Europe’s roads, the first reports on road deaths in 2014 are disappointing,“ the commission said in a press release.
The total number of road deaths was 25,700 over all 28 EU member states, which was 5,700 fewer fatalities than in 2010, but still short of the goal.
“It’s sad and hard to accept that almost 70 Europeans die on our roads every day, with many more being seriously injured,“ said EU Commissioner of Transport Violeta Bulc in a statement. “The figures published today should be a wake-up call. Behind the figures and statistics there are grieving spouses, parents, children, siblings, colleagues and friends. They also remind us that road safety requires constant attention and further efforts.”