Road fatalities
– notes vehicles exceed road capacity; lack of provisions for pedestrians
By Jarryl Bryan
The rate at which new motor vehicles have been introduced locally has in fact exceeded the capacity of Guyana’s roads to accommodate them. This is according to a recent report from the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), which threw a spotlight on this discrepancy.
According to the IDB’s “Reformulation of the road network, upgrade and expansion program” report, this situation is directly contributing to congestion and accidents.
“Georgetown faces limited road infrastructure combined with a rapidly growing fleet (of) 100,000 new registered vehicles over the last decade (which) contributes to congestion and accidents,” the report stated.
The report notes that limited infrastructure includes the average roadway’s two-lane configuration and pavement widths of 9-12m. The organisation said that 80 per cent of the pavements were in fair-to-poor condition.
“Traffic levels peak 1500 vehicles per hour on a road with capacity for 1,320 and no provision for non-motorized pedestrian (and) bicycle traffic,” the report also notes.












