1. Project Introduction — Background & Problem Statement

1.1 Background

Road traffic injuries remain a major public health and development challenge globally, with 92% of deaths occurring in low- and middle-income countries. Africa, despite having only about 4% of the world's registered vehicles, records one of the highest road traffic fatality rates globally — estimated at 19 deaths per 100,000 population. (WHO, 2023) A significant and rapidly growing share of these deaths involves powered two- and three-wheelers (PTWs), whose fatalities have increased by nearly 100% over the past decade — a crisis that is accelerating fastest in West and Central Africa.

92%
Of global road deaths occur in low- & middle-income countries
WHO, 2023
19
Deaths per 100,000 — Africa's road fatality rate
WHO, 2023
100%
Increase in PTW fatalities across Africa over the past decade
WHO/SSATP
4%
Africa's share of world's registered vehicles — yet among the highest fatality rates
WHO, 2023
20+
Years of rising road deaths in Africa — the only continent where fatalities continue to increase
WHO/SSATP

Recent WHO and SSATP reports confirm that Africa is the only continent where road traffic deaths have continued to rise over the last 20 years. Progress in managing key risk factors — speeding, drink-driving, helmet use, seatbelts, and child restraints — remains slow. Governments and regional institutions increasingly recognize that weak crash data systems and limited use of safety performance indicators (SPIs) are central barriers preventing effective, evidence-based road safety action.

1.2 Problem Statement

Across Africa — including Guinea, Liberia, and Togo — crash data systems are characterized by non-harmonized definitions, inconsistent methodologies, and severe underreporting. Many countries rely solely on police data, rarely integrating health or insurance records, while definitions of fatalities and serious injuries often do not align with international standards.

  • The ratio of estimated to reported fatalities remains high — with a significant proportion of PTW crashes and injuries going unrecorded entirely
  • Critical disaggregated data on PTW riders — including helmet use, crash causation, injury severity, and corridor risk — is missing or unreliable across all three participating countries
  • No harmonized crash data definitions or collection methodologies exist across participating countries, making cross-country comparison and regional action impossible
  • Safety Performance Indicators aligned with the UN's 12 voluntary global road safety targets are not operationalized in any of the three countries — leaving governments unable to systematically track progress toward the 2030 road safety agenda
  • PTW riders — including motorcycle taxi operators, tricycle drivers, and commuter motorcyclists — operate in environments with minimal formal safety governance, limited crash data capture, and almost no targeted evidence-based interventions
  • Road safety strategies remain reactive rather than preventive — driven by incidents rather than evidence — limiting Africa's capacity to reduce fatalities in a sustained manner
Africa cannot reduce what it does not measure. And it cannot measure what it does not define, collect, or report consistently. Harmonized crash data and operational SPIs are not technical niceties — they are the foundation of every effective road safety action.
Strategic Role in 2026

The PTTW project strengthens the data backbone of RSAI's entire road safety portfolio — providing the harmonized crash data, operational SPIs, and PTW-specific evidence that audits, policy reform, enforcement strategies, and investment decisions depend upon. In 2026, PTTW positions RSAI as a regional data and evidence leader — contributing African-led research to the global road safety knowledge base while building the national and regional capacities needed to sustain evidence-based road safety management across Liberia, Guinea, and Togo, and beyond.

2. Project Objectives

2.1 Overall Objective

To contribute to a substantial reduction in road traffic fatalities and serious injuries in Africa by strengthening road safety management through harmonized crash data systems, operational Safety Performance Indicators (SPIs), and evidence-based interventions — with a specific focus on powered two- and three-wheelers (PTWs) in Liberia, Guinea, and Togo.

2.2 Specific Objectives

  1. Harmonize crash data definitions, collection methodologies, and reporting systems in line with WHO and UN standards across Liberia, Guinea, and Togo — enabling comparable, reliable, and disaggregated crash data production.
  2. Operationalize the use of Safety Performance Indicators (SPIs) to monitor progress toward the 12 voluntary UN road safety targets in all three participating countries.
  3. Strengthen national and regional capacities for crash data collection, analysis, and use in evidence-based road safety planning — through training, institutional development, and inter-agency data integration.
  4. Develop and disseminate practical, data-driven case studies and guidance on improving PTW safety — covering helmet use, speed management, crash causation, PTW-specific infrastructure, and enforcement.
  5. Promote regional and continental learning through structured dissemination via African road safety networks — including AARSA, SSATP, and other continental platforms.
  6. Contribute African-led evidence to global road safety discourse — informing the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety 2021–2030 and the 12 voluntary global targets with data from the continent most affected.

3. Project Approach & Methodology

The PTTW project adopts a regional, systems-based, and evidence-led approach — combining diagnostic assessments, institutional capacity building, practical PTW safety applications, and structured continental dissemination. The methodology is implemented across four sequential phases:

Phase 1: Addressing Gaps in Crash Data Collection & Management Diagnostic assessments of current crash data systems in Liberia, Guinea, and Togo are conducted — identifying gaps in definitions, collection protocols, data sources, inter-agency integration, and reporting mechanisms. Harmonized crash data standards aligned with WHO and UN definitions are developed and adopted across all three countries, with particular attention to PTW crash and injury data. Inter-agency data sharing frameworks linking police, health, and insurance records are established.
Phase 2: Operationalizing SPIs for the 12 Voluntary UN Road Safety Targets Safety Performance Indicators are selected, defined, and operationalized for each of the 12 voluntary UN global road safety targets — including helmet use rates, seatbelt compliance, speeding rates, drink-driving prevalence, child restraint use, and road infrastructure quality. Data collection protocols and reporting frameworks are established in each participating country, enabling systematic tracking of progress toward the 2030 road safety agenda.
Phase 3: PTW Safety Application Targeted, evidence-based case studies and practical guidance are developed on powered two- and three-wheeler safety — drawing on harmonized crash data and SPI findings from the three countries. PTW-specific interventions are assessed including helmet legislation and enforcement, speed management on PTW-dominated corridors, crash causation analysis, PTW-specific infrastructure design, and regulatory frameworks for motorcycle taxi and tricycle operators.
Phase 4: Continental Dissemination Strategy A structured continental dissemination strategy is implemented — sharing project findings, tools, and lessons through AARSA, SSATP, FIA Foundation networks, regional road safety conferences, peer learning exchanges, and digital platforms. Dissemination outputs include policy briefs, technical guidance documents, case studies, and training resources designed for use by road safety agencies across Africa.

The 12 Voluntary UN Global Road Safety Targets

The PTTW project operationalizes SPIs aligned with all 12 voluntary global road safety targets of the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety 2021–2030:

TARGET 1

Halve road traffic deaths and injuries by 2030

TARGET 2

New vehicles meet highest star rating standards

TARGET 3

All roads meet minimum safety standards

TARGET 4

Speed limits set and enforced at safe levels

TARGET 5

100% seatbelt use for all occupants

TARGET 6

100% helmet use for all powered two-wheeler riders

TARGET 7

Zero drink-driving tolerance

TARGET 8

100% child restraint use

TARGET 9

Eliminate distracted driving

TARGET 10

Ensure all road users have access to basic emergency care within 10 minutes

TARGET 11

Increase road safety funding in national budgets

TARGET 12

Strengthen road safety management capacity and data systems

Key Interventions

Harmonization of Crash Data Definitions & Methodologies

Diagnostic assessments and structured harmonization of crash data definitions, collection methodologies, and inter-agency reporting systems across Liberia, Guinea, and Togo — aligned with WHO and UN standards, with specific attention to PTW crash data capture, severity classification, and cross-border comparability.

Deployment of SPIs for the UN 12 Global Road Safety Targets

Selection, definition, and operationalization of Safety Performance Indicators aligned with all 12 voluntary UN global road safety targets — establishing data collection protocols, baselines, and reporting frameworks in each participating country to enable systematic progress tracking toward the 2030 road safety agenda.

Capacity Building in Crash Data Analysis & Use

Structured capacity building for road safety agencies, national police, health institutions, and transport authorities in all three countries — covering crash data collection, inter-agency integration, SPI monitoring, data analysis tools, and the translation of evidence into policy recommendations and enforcement strategies.

Regional Learning & Continental Dissemination

Structured continental dissemination of project findings, case studies, and guidance tools through AARSA, SSATP, FIA Foundation, and African road safety networks — sharing PTW safety evidence, SPI frameworks, and crash data harmonization tools with road safety agencies across Africa to accelerate regional learning and adoption.

4. Project Organization & Staffing

Lead Implementing Organization: Road Safety Action International (RSAI) — Liberia

The PTTW project is implemented through a multi-partner consortium bringing together technical expertise, institutional authority, and regional reach:

Partner / Institution Role & Technical Contribution
Road Safety Action International (RSAI) — Liberia Lead implementing partner; Liberia country lead; project coordination; crash data diagnostics; SPI deployment; capacity building delivery
World Health Organization (WHO) Technical advisory on crash data standards, SPI frameworks, and alignment with UN voluntary global targets; quality assurance of data harmonization outputs
International Road Assessment Programme (iRAP) Road infrastructure safety assessment methodology; PTW infrastructure risk analysis; star rating alignment for road safety targets
Sub-Saharan Transport Programme (SSATP) Regional coordination and knowledge dissemination; continental platform for sharing project outputs across African road safety stakeholders
AGUISER — Guinea Guinea country lead; national crash data diagnostic; SPI operationalization; institutional capacity development for Guinea road safety agencies
Club des Amis du Monde (CAM) — Guinea Community engagement and civil society voice in Guinea; PTW rider community outreach and behavioral research support
Government of Togo Togo country lead and institutional authority; crash data access; SPI national adoption; policy integration of project recommendations
African Association of Road Safety Agencies (AARSA) Continental dissemination partner; peer learning exchange facilitation; regional network engagement for knowledge sharing
FIA Foundation (FIAF) Strategic partner; PTW safety advocacy; financing support; global road safety network connection
Technical Specialists Crash data harmonization specialists; SPI analysts; PTW safety experts; M&E specialists — mobilized as required across project phases

5. Project Schedule

Project Duration: February 2026 – January 2028 (24 months)

The project is implemented across four sequential 6-month phases:

1
Phase 1 — Crash Data Gap Assessment & Harmonization (Months 1–6, Year 1) Conduct diagnostic assessments of crash data systems in Liberia, Guinea, and Togo — documenting gaps in definitions, collection, inter-agency integration, and reporting. Develop and adopt harmonized crash data standards aligned with WHO and UN definitions. Establish inter-agency data sharing frameworks. Produce baseline crash data reports for each country disaggregated by road user type, including PTW-specific data.
2
Phase 2 — SPI Operationalization for UN 12 Targets (Months 7–12, Year 1) Select and define Safety Performance Indicators for each of the 12 voluntary UN global road safety targets. Establish baseline SPI measurements in each participating country. Design and implement SPI data collection protocols. Conduct capacity building training for national agencies on SPI monitoring and reporting. Produce the first SPI monitoring report for each country, submitted to national road safety agencies and international partners.
3
Phase 3 — PTW Safety Application & Case Studies (Months 13–18, Year 2) Develop evidence-based PTW safety case studies drawing on harmonized crash data and SPI findings — covering helmet legislation and enforcement gaps, speed management on PTW-dominated corridors, crash causation analysis for motorcycle and tricycle operators, PTW-specific infrastructure risk assessment, and regulatory framework recommendations. Produce practical guidance documents for use by road safety agencies in all three countries and across Africa.
4
Phase 4 — Continental Dissemination & Knowledge Exchange (Months 19–24, Year 2) Implement the continental dissemination strategy — sharing project outputs through AARSA, SSATP, FIA Foundation, and African road safety networks. Conduct regional peer learning events and workshops. Publish PTW safety guidance, SPI frameworks, and crash data harmonization tools in formats accessible to road safety agencies across Africa. Submit final project report to UNRSF and all partners.

6. Budget

Total Budget Requested (UNRSF): USD 500,000

Budget Component Description Estimated Cost (USD)
Staff & Personnel Costs Project coordinators, crash data specialists, SPI analysts, PTW safety experts, capacity trainers, M&E officers across all three countries 250,000
Equipment & Materials Data collection tools, survey equipment, GIS and analysis software, training materials, and publication production 50,000
Travel In-country field missions, regional partner coordination visits, dissemination conference participation, and cross-country workshops 50,000
Contractual Services Specialist consultants, translation services, creative production for dissemination materials, and technical advisory services 50,000
Transfers & Grants to Counterparts Institutional grants to national partner organizations in Guinea and Togo for in-country implementation activities 100,000
Total Project Cost USD 500,000

7. Project Log Frame — Outputs, Outcomes & Impact

Level Statement Indicators Means of Verification
Impact Substantial reduction in road traffic fatalities and serious injuries — particularly involving PTW riders — in Liberia, Guinea, and Togo through improved, evidence-based road safety management; Africa's contribution to the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety strengthened % reduction in PTW-related fatalities in participating countries over project period; progress toward UN voluntary global road safety targets measurable through operational SPIs National crash databases; WHO global road safety reports; UN Decade of Action progress tracking; AARSA regional data
Outcome 1 Improved road safety management in Liberia, Guinea, and Togo through harmonized crash data systems and operational Safety Performance Indicators Harmonized crash data standards adopted in all 3 countries; SPIs operational and reported for all 12 UN targets in each country; data quality improvement rate National crash data reports; SPI monitoring frameworks; WHO standards compliance assessment; inter-agency data sharing records
Outcome 2 Strengthened national and regional capacity for crash data analysis and evidence-based road safety planning Number of national agency staff trained and assessed as competent; % of road safety planning documents referencing project data outputs Training records; capacity assessments; national road safety strategy documents
Outcome 3 Evidence-based PTW safety guidance contributing to improved PTW safety policy and enforcement across participating countries and the wider continent Number of policy changes or enforcement actions informed by PTW case studies; number of African countries adopting project tools and guidance Policy documents; enforcement records; AARSA adoption tracking; dissemination reach data
Output 1 Harmonized crash data standards and inter-agency frameworks developed and adopted in Liberia, Guinea, and Togo Standards documents produced; inter-agency agreements signed; baseline crash data reports produced per country Standards documentation; inter-agency agreements; baseline reports
Output 2 SPIs operationalized for all 12 UN voluntary global road safety targets in all three countries SPI frameworks developed per country; baseline SPI data collected; first SPI monitoring reports produced SPI framework documents; monitoring reports; national agency endorsement records
Output 3 Capacity building training delivered to national road safety agencies in Liberia, Guinea, and Togo Number of staff trained; training modules developed; competence assessment scores Training records; assessment results; attendance registers
Output 4 PTW safety case studies and practical guidance documents produced and disseminated Case studies produced; guidance documents published; number of countries/agencies receiving materials Published documents; distribution records; download and citation data
Output 5 Continental dissemination activities conducted through AARSA, SSATP, and African road safety networks Dissemination events held; countries reached; publications distributed Event reports; attendance records; distribution data; network reach analytics
Activity 1 Conduct crash data diagnostic assessments in all 3 countries Diagnostics completed; gap reports produced Diagnostic reports; gap analysis documentation
Activity 2 Develop and adopt harmonized crash data standards Standards developed; adopted by national agencies Standards documents; adoption records
Activity 3 Select, define, and operationalize SPIs for UN 12 targets SPIs defined; data collection protocols established; baselines measured SPI framework documents; baseline data reports
Activity 4 Deliver capacity building training to national agencies Training delivered; staff trained and assessed Training reports; assessment records
Activity 5 Develop PTW safety case studies and guidance tools Case studies and guidance produced and published Publication records; distribution logs
Activity 6 Implement continental dissemination strategy Dissemination events held; outputs shared through regional networks Event reports; network reach data; final project report

8. Conclusion

Every PTW crash accurately recorded is evidence that could prevent the next one — and inform the policy that protects the next rider.

Every SPI operationalized is a measure of whether Africa is winning or losing its road safety fight — and a tool to hold governments accountable for the commitments they have made.

Every case study disseminated across African road safety networks is knowledge that travels faster than the problem it addresses.


The PTTW project is RSAI's commitment to the proposition that African data should drive African road safety action
that powered two-wheeler riders deserve to be counted, measured, protected, and served
by road safety systems built on evidence, not assumption.

Partner With Us

We welcome partnerships with institutions committed to data-driven road safety for PTW riders and all road users across Africa:

WHO iRAP SSATP FIA Foundation AARSA UNRSF National Road Safety Agencies African Development Bank Research Institutions

Together, we can build the data infrastructure Africa needs to measure its road safety crisis accurately — and act on it decisively, starting with the riders most at risk.