Abstract:
A9 (Kandy-Jaffna Highway) was opened for traffic after renovation of section from Vavuniya to Jaffna in 2013. Even though it has provided several safety precautions, the most number of accidents reported along the highway have occurred in the district of Jaffna, Kilinochchi and Vavuniya. Therefore identifying accident black spot locations and cause for the accidents where majority of the accidents taken place are essential for immediate safety measures and improvements.
The main research objectives are to identify accidents black spot locations, identify possible causes for the accident and calculate the accident rate based on vehicle travel kilometre.
According to this research study, fifteen most critical accident black spot locations were identified by using three scientific method namely Accident rate, Accident frequency and Weighted severity index in the A9 road section from Vavuniya to Jaffna. Accident locations were grouped into nearest 100m distance and the fifteen most critical locations are 300+000 –300+100 km, 303+000-303+100 km, 177+000-177+100 km, 312+200-312+300 km, 307+000-307+100 km, 299+100-299+200 km, 305+000-305+100 km, 301+100-301+200 km, 176+800-176+900 km, 298+400-298+500 km, 309+000-309+100 km, 176+700-176+800 km, 308+100-308+200 km, 305+100-305+200 km and 176+100-176+200 km. Primary causing factor for the accidents, as per the accident records, is human and environment also act as a key factor for some accidents. Accidents happened during day time are twice higher than that of night time. However, this trend was same in each of the section along the road.
Even though the highest accident rate of around 1.31 x 10-6 veh km was noted from Palai to Meesalai east section. Accident rates in each section have increased from year 2012 to 2014. When comparing A9 road section from Vavuniya to Jaffna with A9 road section from Kandy to Vavuniya with same corridor geometry in 2014, A9 road section from Vavuniya to Jaffna shows higher accident rate (0.68 x 10-6 per vehicle kilometre travelled) than other corridors (0.47 x 10-6 per vehicle kilometre travelled). In addition, fatality rate in A9 road section from Vavuniya to Jaffna has increased from 2012 to 2014, which is considerably a higher value than fatality rates of road accidents in most of the other countries.