27 April 2018
Volvo XC90 'sets the safety standard' for all manufacturers to follow, says expert
The Volvo XC90 “sets the standard” for all other motor manufacturers to follow, it is claimed, with figures revealing that no occupants in the model have died in car-to-car crashes in the UK.
The statistics, provided by the police as a result of personal injury accidents on public roads, show that no XC90 driver or passenger fatalities have been reported since records began in 2004.
The XC90, more than 70,000 of which have been sold in the UK to date, has been at the forefront of SUV safety ever since the first-generation model was launched in 2002, according to Volvo.
It was the first SUV in the world to be fitted with Roll Stability Control, which measures a car’s roll angle in extreme manoeuvres and activates the stability control system to reduce the risk of a rollover accident.
The second-generation XC90, launched in 2014, came with two world-first safety aids: Run-off Road Protection and automatic emergency braking at junctions. Should the car inadvertently leave the road, Run-off Road Protection automatically tightens the front seatbelts to keep occupants in the safest possible position. To help prevent spinal injuries, a collapsible energy-absorbing section between the front seats and seat frame cushions the vertical forces that can occur if the car lands on a hard surface. The XC90 was also the first car in the world to feature automatic emergency braking that activates if the driver turns into the path of an oncoming vehicle at a junction.
The focus on safety innovation and real-life crash data is all part of Volvo’s Vision 2020 - that no one will be killed or seriously injured in a new car from the manufacturer by 2020.
Matthew Avery, director of research at Thatcham Research, the motor insurers’ automotive research centre, who analysed the government data, said: “The extraordinary safety record of the Volvo XC90 in the UK is built on class-leading passive safety.”
Crash testing via the European New Car Assessment Programme (Euro NCAP), said Mr Avery, showed that “unrivalled protection was given to occupants of the car”.
He continued: “Volvo has long been a pioneer in active safety, too, offering standard-fit safety technologies which help drivers to avoid crashes completely. This not only protects occupants, but also those outside of the car.
“It’s that combination of outstanding passive and active safety which sees Volvo cars excel in Euro NCAP safety testing, setting the standard for all car makers.”
Jon Wakefield, Volvo Car UK’s managing director, said: “Volvo has been at the forefront of automotive occupant safety since we invented the three-point seatbelt in 1959, and our determination to build the safest cars possible has been backed up not only by the safety awards we have won, but most importantly by the real-life safety record of our cars. Put simply, there is no safer car on the road than a Volvo.”
Industry-leading safety technology extends across the entire Volvo range with the XC60 mid-size premium SUV the first car to come with automatic emergency braking as standard when it was launched in 2008, while every new Volvo model has been fitted with the life-saving technology since 2014.
The latest version of automatic emergency braking can detect pedestrians, cyclists and large animals, helping to keep all road users free from harm.
Both the latest-generation XC90 and XC60 were named the car with the best overall performance of the year when they were tested by Euro NCAP, in 2015 and 2017 respectively.