The European Union has asked car makers in the region to ensure that all new passenger cars are fitted with a life saving automatic dial-up system by October 2015 so that emergency workers are intimated of an accident and can speed up to the site of the crash as soon as possible. "When an accident happens, every minute counts," the bloc's Transport Commissioner Siim Kallas said Thursday on proposing new legislation enabling vehicles to automatically call for help in case of an accident.
Last year 28,000 people died and 1.5 million were injured on EU roads. The European Commission says the automatic eCall system could speed up emergency response by 40 percent in built-up areas and 50 percent in the countryside -- saving up to 2,500 lives a year.
The eCall system automatically calls 112 -- Europe's single emergency number -- in the event of a serious crash, communicating the vehicle's location, even if the driver is unconscious or unable to make a call.
"Today's proposals are a milestone for safer roads in the EU," Kallas added.
They will also help make European vehicles more intelligent and give a much-needed shot in the arm to the bloc's struggling auto industry, senior officials said.
Under the draft proposals released by the EU executive, all new models of passenger cars and light utility vehicles would be fitted with 112 eCall and infrastructure put in place to ensure handling of the calls at response centres across the European Union.
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Addressing concerns over privacy, the Commission said eCall does not allow the tracking of vehicles as it sleeps until activated by a crash to send signals.
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Source-AFP