Bike Accidents Decline As Ridership Rises

Cyclists

More bicycles on the road means more chances for drivers yakking on cell phones or gorging on McFood to hit one, right? Wrong.

According to a study by researchers at the University of New South Wales, the number of collisions decreases as the number of bicycles in traffic increases. It sounds like a paradox, they say, but motorists are more likely to drive carefully and respectfully when there are more cyclists on the road.

"It's a virtuous cycle," says Dr Julie Hatfield. "The likelihood that an
individual cyclist will be struck by a motorist falls with increasing
rate of bicycling in a community. And the safer cycling is perceived to
be, the more people are prepared to cycle."

The researchers say studies in several countries have shown the incidence of motorists colliding with cyclists or pedestrians actually declines as more people ride or walk. The reason, they say, is simple -- the more cyclists motorists see, the more aware they are of cyclists in general and more safely they drive.

"It's a positive effect but some people are surprised that injury rates
don't go up at the same rate of increases in cycling," he says. "It appears that motorists adjust their behavior in the
presence of increasing numbers of people bicycling because they expect
or experience more people cycling. Also, rising cycling rates mean
motorists are more likely to be cyclists, and therefore be more
conscious of, and sympathetic towards, cyclists."

The findings run counter to conventional thinking, which holds that more cyclists means more chances for collisions.
While the numbers do increase in absolute terms, a city that doubles
its cycling numbers can expect a
one-third drop in the per-cyclist frequency of a crash.

When that news gets out, it could create a long-term cyclist
friendly
cycle: If people perceive biking to be safe, more of them will do it.
More cyclists means better motorist behavior and greater likelihood of
communities passing bike friendly laws, further proving H.G. Wells was right when he said cycle tracks will abound in Utopia.

Photo by Flickr user swankalot.




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