The United Nations Road Safety Fund (UNRSF) is a United Nations global multi-partner trust fund dedicated to supporting the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 3.6, aiming to halve the number of road traffic deaths and injuries by 2030, by financing global road safety projects in low- and middle- income countries (LMICs).[1][2]
The UNRSF aims to finance high-impact global road safety projects in LMICs using well-researched and internationally recognized best practices to minimize road trauma and improve safety for all road users.[3]
In support of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), each of the six platforms corresponding to a respective SGD. These include the Platform on Health and Road Safety (SDG 3), the Platform on Education and Road Safety (SDG 4), as well as Platforms on Gender Equality (SDG 5), Economic Growth (SDG 8), Low-Carbon Sustainable Cities (SDGs 11, 13), Partnerships & Data (SGD 17).[4] Road safety experts from academia and industry are recruited to serve as advisors to inform funding allocation and identify high-impact global road safety projects.
The UNRSF was launched on April 12, 2018, at UNHQ New York.[2] The FIA Foundation pledged US$10 million to the United Nations to support the creation of the "UN Safety Trust Fund."[5][6]
Funding supported legislation in Azerbaijan to improve post-crash response to road traffic incidents.[7]
Enforcement is a key element of road safety by ensuring legislation is implemented. Funding from the UNRSF supported increased speed limit enforcement in Brazil and Jordan.[7]
With the importance of surveillance is toward establishing baselines for improvement, the UNRSF has funded improvements to data collection in Senegal and the Ivory Coast.[7]
In Kenya, the UNRSF has supported road safety elements for vulnerable road users like pedestrians and cyclists.[8] Funding for urban planner training in Paraguay has increased the safety of school zones.[7]