Tech Tour recognises Safety21

Safety21 at the Italian Tech Tour: our company was selected as one of the 50 fastest growing companies in Europe.

We were presented with an award at the Rome stage of the Italian Tech Tour 2016. This international event aimed at matching emerging or already established start-ups/innovative companies with European investors, venture capitalists, corporate investors and business angels kicked off at Invitalia’s Rome offices with Safety21’s participation The basis of the award is Tech Tour’s selection of the fifty European start-ups that have grown the most in the last ten years.

Safety21 at Microsoft Forum 2017

Safety21 was also among the 2,000 professionals taking part in the Microsoft Forum 2017, the event in Milan where Microsoft opened a lively debate on the digital revolution and the prospects of Industry 4.0.

Within the Exhibition Area, which took the form of an experiential path to discover how new technologies are capable of revolutionising the industrial world and society in a smart and IoT context, Safety21, as a Microsoft Partner, presented the smart city project Safe Pedestrian 2.0.

Based on Microsoft’s cloud and IoT, our Safety 2.0 solution uses sensors and analysis tools to detect and alert cars to the presence of pedestrians at pedestrian crossings without traffic lights and to enable authorities to view live and on-demand footage of the crossing. An evolved response to the safety needs of every contemporary and future city.

Read the Wired article

Safety21 expands its services, A21 Riscossioni is launched

The year 2017 is a year of strong growth for the Safety21 Group. With a view to offering increasingly integrated and advanced outsourcing services, Safety21 has founded A21 Riscossioni Srl in partnership with the Engineering Group.

This new Group company, through which Safety21 becomes, to all intents and purposes, an all-round partner for Public Authorities, provides specialised services to support service operators and Public Authorities in managing the enforced collection of traffic offence-related receivables.

These outsourced services, offered through a team of experts specialised in credit analysis, evaluation and collection procedures, are fully integrated with the services offered by Safety21 and with the highest levels of security and data protection in information management

Smart city. Meeting in Sanremo

What is the relationship between technology and safety? And what are the sustainability criteria for innovative Smart City projects that aim to protect the public and monitor the region? We discussed this during the conference ‘Smart city: sustainable innovation for road safety’, held on 23 June in the Sala degli Specchi of Sanremo Town Hall.

The meeting, organised by the Leonardo da Vinci Cultural Association with the participation of Safety21 and the international law firm Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP., aimed at presenting the attending local authorities with new opportunities for implementing an integrated security project through project financing and public-private cooperation.

Technical and regulatory aspects of the subject, covered by Paolo Tommasini, Head of Business Development at Safety21, and by Francesca Isgrò, lawyer and partner at Orrick, were fully illustrated using a real project financing case study: the road safety project “Ti Voglio Bene” (I Love You), which Safety21 offers to Public Authorities to assist them in their task of balancing protecting their citizens safety with the resources available to them and which seeks to raise civic awareness of safety through a series of initiatives aimed at young people in particular.

ASAPS, Hit-and-runs in 2016

On 24th March, during the seminar organised by the Municipality of Verona entitled ‘Vehicular homicide one year on’, ASAPS (Association of Supporters and Friends of the Traffic Police) presented data on hit-and-runs in 2016: an interesting assessment that put into perspective the nine months in which Law No. 41 of 24 March 2016 on Vehicular Homicide and Road Injury had been in force. The facts considered in the drafting are the most serious throughout the country.

The data that emerges is clear: in 2016, the number of incidents rose 9.6% compared to the previous year, but the number of deaths fell sharply to 115 compared to 146 in 2015 (-21.2%). A total of 84.6% of all hit-and-runs – 1,009 compared with 183 – took place during the day and, once again, it was the most vulnerable road users, children and the elderly, who paid the highest price (9.5% and 8.2% respectively).

Pedestrians are still the most severely affected category, with 444 casualties: 54 deaths, accounting for 47% of total deaths (down from 2015 when there were 76 and 52% of total deaths), and 441 injuries (30.9%).

How, then, do we explain the fact that incidents have increased and deaths have decreased? There is only one indication, warns ASAPS: positive tests for alcohol and drugs amongst identified perpetrators are declining. In 2016 they totalled 15.3%, while in 2015 they had been 17.5%.

In addition, 55.3% of perpetrators were caught in 2016, down slightly from 56.2% in 2015, while 44.7% remain unknown. The percentage of perpetrators who were identified in fatal hit-and-runs was higher. In this case, it was close to 60%.

Pedestrian accidents, 2001-2015 picture

In the last 15 years (2001 -2015), 10,940 pedestrians have died on Italian roads and 291,044 have been injured, with an average of 729 deaths and 19,403 injuries per year: that amounts to 2 deaths per day and 53 admissions to Italian accident and emergency departments each day. This was announced by ASAPS (Association of Supporters and Friends of the Traffic Police) in a recent survey covering the fifteen-year period from 2001-2015.

The worst year was 2002 with 1,226 pedestrians killed on the roads, a tragic figure. A slow improvement followed. And yet, although there are many disturbing statistics in this picture, there is one that is of particular concern to ASAPS, and to us too, and that relates to pedestrian accidents. In 2015, according to ISTAT data, there were 602 pedestrian fatalities, the worst figure in the last five years, surpassed only by the 621 fatalities in 2010. In 2001, pedestrians accounted for 14.5% of all road deaths; in 2015 they accounted for 17.6%. Taking it a step further, in 2016 out of 115 deaths in hit-and-run accidents according to the ASAPS Observatory, pedestrians accounted for 47%.

This upward trend is due to the convergence of several factors: in addition to the danger posed by drunk drivers, there is now a growing risk of distraction from mobile phone use while driving and at the same time the safety, visibility and lighting of pedestrian crossings are often as poorly managed as controls on crossing behaviour.

This is a fact that calls us not only to reflection but also to action. At Safety21, we are focusing our research and development activities on high-tech safety solutions in this field, including those designed to protect pedestrian crossings. We are working to ensure that statistics such as these do not remain just a number, but represent a constant reminder to seek solutions through innovation and shared objectives.

Safety21

Want to know more?

Fill in the form to get more information and receive the contact of one of our employees