Accidents on Bogota’s public transportation system triple in 2013: Report

(Photo: Diario ADN)

An average of six accidents occur every day on Bogota’s Mass Transit and Public Transport System, which was responsible for 32 fatalities in 2013, according to a report by national news media.

El Tiempo, Colombia’s largest national newspaper, claims to be in possession of a Transmilenio Mass Transit System file documenting an increase of over 300% in the number of accidents involving Transmilenio vehicles in 2013, including 205 accidents in the first two months of 2014 that left 601 people injured and four dead.

MORE: TransMilenio collision in Bogota leaves 44 injured

Bogota is one of the few Latin American capital cities that has no metro, and one of the few cities in the world of its size to lack one, as well. Instead, the Transmilenio bus system carries more than 2.4 million people every day, almost one-third of Bogota’s total number of inhabitants. Transmilenio accidents have made news for several years, and even more so since the introduction of Integrated Public Transport System (SITP) buses in 2012.

MORE: Transmilenio bus collision leaves at least 23 injured in Bogota

Crash statistics

El Tiempo reports that, according to the document, Transmilenio buses were involved in a total of 732 collisions in in 2012, including 347 new SITP buses that had only been in operation for three months.

MORE: 56 injured in 2 separate Bogota bus accidents

In 2013, these same buses were involved in 2,215 road accidents in Bogota, more than tripling the number of accidents from the previous year. Among the 2013 crashes, SITP buses were involved in 1,474 incidents, or 66% of the total Transmilenio accidents.

MORE: Bogota TransMilenio bus crash injures 86

Representatives for Transmilenio told El Tiempo that all medical and funeral expenses are covered by Compulsory Accident Insurance and the vehicle liability policies of each bus operator, and that Transmilenio 

Transmilenio also told El Tiempo that it has initiated training programs for operators to focus on road safety and the use of stimulants, and has developed six annual seminars that also address these issues.

Bogota’s bigger transportation problem

Moreover, a 2013 report issued by the Bogota Mayor’s office stated that car traffic in the capital has doubled over the past decade. The number of cars on the road daily increased from 509,000 in 2002 to 1,290,000 in 2012. In order to try and control traffic, the city issues “pico y placa” rules for alternating street permits, restricting 

MORE: Bogota says car traffic in Colombia’s capital doubled over past decade 

During a speech at the World Urban Forum in April, President Santos talked about the public transport issues that Bogota faces and the importance of a metro system. “A Metro is a necessity to Bogota. We are among three cities in the world with more than 7 million people and no metro,” said Santos. The president added that “the metro on its own is not the solution, neither is the Transmilenio on its own.”

However, an internationally renowned urban planning expert advised Bogota to invest further in its Transmilenio bus system instead, saying that a

MORE: ‘Bogota metro would be costly and have little impact’: Urban planning expert

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