Post on 12-Jan-2016
Title: Australia’s Proposal for the Development of Pole Side Impact GTRPresenter’s Name: Allan JonasEconomy: Australia
33rd APEC Transportation Working Group Tokyo, JapanOctober 10-14 2010
JAPAN 2010
33rd APEC Transportation Working Group, Tokyo, Japan, October 10-14 2010
GRSP Informal Group to Develop a GTR on Pole Side Impact
Factors Driving Development of a GTR• Safety Need
• Different regulatory and non-regulatory pole side impact tests in different countries/regions
• Progress in developing WorldSID
JAPAN 2010
33rd APEC Transportation Working Group, Tokyo, Japan, October 10-14 2010
Safety NeedAustralian experience• Over 10% of all Australian road fatalities are from pole side impacts (i.e. side impacts
with narrow objects)– Over 15% of all occupant fatalities in M1 vehicles are from pole side impacts– Around 25% of all Australian road fatalities are from side impacts of every kind– Over 30% of all occupant fatalities in M1 vehicles are from side impacts of every kind•Data is currently being collected on other countries’ experience, but indicative data indicates pole impacts and side impacts more generally are a major safety problem internationally– Fatalities from side impacts in the UK and the US are well over 20%– APROSYS estimated there were 10,000 deaths a year in Europe from side impacts– Pole side impacts are likely to produce a smaller share of serious injuries than fatalities,
but these injuries are frequently serious head injuries– In-depth accident studies have shown head injury to be the most common cause of
death in car-to-car side impact crashes in Japan (43% of cases).
JAPAN 2010
33rd APEC Transportation Working Group, Tokyo, Japan, October 10-14 2010
Different Pole Side Impact Tests• EuroNCAP (and ANCAP)
– ES-2– 29 km/h
• US has commenced phase in of an oblique (75°) angle test in regulation (FMVSS 214)– ES-2re and SID-IIs– 26-32 km/h
• APROSYS has recommended a perpendicular offset (100mm) test
JAPAN 2010
33rd APEC Transportation Working Group, Tokyo, Japan, October 10-14 2010
A Common Regulatory Standard• A rigorous and common regulatory standard is highly
desirable• It should significantly reduce pole side impact
fatalities/serious injuries, while requiring countermeasures to protect the head and thorax that will reduce other types of side impact fatalities/serious injuries– It may also reduce rollover fatalities (about 20% of
the Australian road toll)• It will also provide a common standard for vehicle
manufacturers
JAPAN 2010
33rd APEC Transportation Working Group, Tokyo, Japan, October 10-14 2010
WorldSID• Progress on WorldSID provides a unique opportunity
to develop a global pole impact standard• WorldSID biofidelity rating of 7.6 (ISO TR9790)
– ES-2 – 4.7– ES-2re – 4.2
• The Informal Group on WorldSID is finalising development of WorldSID 50th percentile male and 5th percentile female for regulatory use
JAPAN 2010
33rd APEC Transportation Working Group, Tokyo, Japan, October 10-14 2010
Formation of GRSP Informal Group to Develop a GTR on Pole Side Impact
• March 2010 – Australia submitted an informal document proposing development of a GTR on Pole Side Impact to the UNECE World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations (WP29) (WP.29-150-11)
• May 2010 – the Australian proposal and additional paper (GRSP-47-28) were considered at the Working Party on Passive Safety (GRSP). GRSP recommended establishment of an Informal Group.
JAPAN 2010
33rd APEC Transportation Working Group, Tokyo, Japan, October 10-14 2010
Formation of GRSP Informal Group to Develop a GTR on Pole Side Impact
• June 2010 – WP29 considered Australia’s formal proposal for a GTR (WP.29/2010/81) and agreed to develop the GTR and to establish an Informal Group.
• WP29 also agreed that the initial tasks of the Informal Group should be to – (i) confirm the safety need for a GTR in light of the increasing
prevalence of the electronic stability control in the vehicle fleet and
– (ii) simultaneously assess potential candidate crash test standards to be addressed by the proposed GTR
• WP29 was clear that establishment of safety need and development of GTR should occur simultaneously
JAPAN 2010
33rd APEC Transportation Working Group, Tokyo, Japan, October 10-14 2010
The Informal Group
• Chaired by Australia (Robert Hogan)• First meeting – Bonn, 16-18 November 2010• Extensive Government and industry membership
– Government members include the USA, Canada, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Germany, Italy, France, the European Commission, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, the Republic of Korea and China
• Further members from APEC would be most welcome
JAPAN 2010
33rd APEC Transportation Working Group, Tokyo, Japan, October 10-14 2010
Crash tests• An immediate task for the Informal Group is to assess
potential candidate crash test standards, including variations to these standards
• Australia has recently conducted sets of 3 crash tests on two different vehicle models using two WorldSID 50th percentile males borrowed from Transport Canada– The tests were perpendicular, offset perpendicular and
oblique at 32 km/h, with WorldSIDs seated in both the driver and front passenger seats
• Australia gave a report on these tests in the recent WorldSID meeting, but will provide a more detailed presentation in Bonn in November – Other informal group members are expected to report on
relevant tests
JAPAN 2010
33rd APEC Transportation Working Group, Tokyo, Japan, October 10-14 2010
Crash tests• An immediate task for the Informal Group is to assess
potential candidate crash test standards, including variations to these standards
• Australia has recently conducted sets of 3 crash tests on two different vehicle models using two WorldSID 50th percentile males borrowed from Transport Canada– The tests were perpendicular, offset perpendicular and
oblique at 32 km/h, with WorldSIDs seated in both the driver and front passenger seats
• Australia gave a report on these tests in the recent WorldSID meeting, but will provide a more detailed presentation in Bonn in November – Other informal group members are expected to report on
relevant tests
JAPAN 2010
33rd APEC Transportation Working Group, Tokyo, Japan, October 10-14 2010
Further Information
Website with more information, including draft terms of reference: http://www.unece.org/trans/main/wp29/wp29wgs/wp29grsp/psimpact_1.htmlRobert Hogan can be contacted on robert.hogan@infrastructure.gov.au