CommunityDispatch.com
Community News and Information

Contact Us | Submit News |About Us| Subscribe | Home Page
Custom Search


search
For More Current News, Click Here

Search








National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
RSS Feed RSS Feed
Last Updated: Jul 11, 2008 - 11:26:39 AM

                                                                                                                              

DOT Proposes Anti-Rollover Technology for New Vehicles


By National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA


Sep 15, 2006 - 6:23:00 AM


 

 

 

 

NHTSA 09-06
Thursday, September 14, 2006
Contact: Rae Tyson
Telephone: (202) 366-9550

DOT Proposes Anti-Rollover Technology for New Vehicles

A new proposal to require auto manufacturers to install electronic stability control (ESC) as a standard feature on all new passenger vehicles has the potential to save more than 10,000 lives every year, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) announced today.

The proposed rule, announced today, would require all manufacturers to begin equipping passenger vehicles under 10,000 pounds with ESC starting with the 2009 model year and to have the feature available as standard equipment on all vehicles by the 2012 model year (September 2011).

ESC systems use automatic computer-controlled braking of individual wheels to help the driver maintain control in situations where a vehicle without ESC would skid out of control and likely leave the road. Nearly all rollover crashes occur after a vehicle leaves the road. A 2004 study by NHTSA estimated that ESC reduced fatalities in single-vehicle crashes by 30 percent for passenger cars and 63 percent for SUVs.

NHTSA Administrator Nicole Nason called electronic stability control for cars “the greatest life saving improvement since the safety belt.”

The agency estimates that ESC will save between 5,300 and 10,300 lives annually and prevent between 168,000 and 252,000 injuries. ESC will prevent between 4,200 and 5,400 of the more than 10,000 deaths that occur each year as a result of rollover crashes.

According the NHTSA's proposed regulation, the average cost is estimated to be $111 per vehicle on vehicles that already include ABS brakes.

Since 2004, NHTSA has urged manufacturers to voluntarily add ESC as standard equipment on vehicles. As a result, almost 29 percent of all 2006 models - 57 percent of SUVs - are already equipped with ESC.

NHTSA is asking for comments on the ESC proposal for the next 60 days. A copy of the proposed regulation and the accompanying regulatory analysis can be seen here.

---

>>How ESC systems work

>>2007 vehicles equipped with ESC

>>2006 vehicles equipped with ESC

 



National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
Latest Headlines


Drug Testing: New DOT Rule Makes Cheating on Drug Testing Harder
Children Flying Alone, DOt Releases New Guide
Americans Drove 1.4 Billion Fewer Highway Miles in April of 2008 than in April 2007
Infiniti SUV earns top safety award
Traffic Control Device Rules Strengthened In New Publication
New 2008 CHP laws For The Road
Daily Death Toll from Drunk Driving Crashes Highest During Holiday Season, New Data Shows
New crash tests: some midsize SUVs perform worse than many cars in side tests

esc, electronic stability control