NEWS

The Cycling Advocates Network (CAN) announces the launch of a media guide to cycling in New Zealand. The one-page guide is designed to give media a brief, factual overview of cycling to help ensure accurate reporting.

There are a number of myths and misperceptions of cycling, and unfortunately media often relay these unintentionally - see Cycling Facts and Fiction.

CAN’s view is that cycling is popular, safe, responsible and contributes actively to community well-being. We realise this is a pro-cycling view, but we also do our best to be well-informed. So we invite the media to check the facts below and use them as appropriate in cycling-related news and stories.’

The Guide is provided below and CAN’s website provides more detailed facts (see under ‘Resources on Home page’ or ‘About Us’).

THE CAN MEDIA GUIDE TO CYCLING IN NEW ZEALAND (PDF)

The data below are sourced from Ministry of Transport (MoT), Statistics NZ, Ministry of Justice (MoJ), SPARC, Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) and Injury Prevention Research Unit (IPRU). In some cases these sources have been combined to clarify issues.

1. How many cyclists are there in New Zealand?

The MoT Household Travel Survey (2006) shows there are 1.274 million cyclists in New Zealand, or a third (31%) of New Zealanders. By comparison, there are about 3 million people with car licences.

  • About 750,000 or a fifth (18%) of New Zealanders are regular cyclists (cycling at least once a month) and 144,000 or 3.5% cycle nearly every day
  • About 38,000 or 1% ride to work (about 2.5% of commuters) according to the 2006 Census

Sport NZ figures show cycling is one of the most popular leisure pastimes across children and adults. ACC figures suggest cycling is far safer (has a lower number of injuries among people doing it) than rugby, cricket, basketball, soccer, netball and tennis.

2. How dangerous and irresponsible is cycling?

Cycling is relatively safe and responsible. MoT traffic crash, IPRU injury and MoJ traffic offence data show:

  • About 1 in 1,000 cyclists are in injury crashes every year, compared with about 3 in 1,000 car drivers – and the cost of car crashes is among the top injury-related health costs in NZ
  • Since 2000 about 750 cyclists were injured and 10 killed on average on the road every year, only 5% of the total - low given the numbers of cyclists
  • Cyclists are more often seriously injured than car users - school-aged cyclists are at highest risk, while regular cyclists have more crashes per hour travelled than car users
  • Only 40% of on-road cycling crashes are caused directly by the cyclist – the lowest rate of any mode
  • Cyclist traffic offences total less than 1% of all traffic offences per year – a negligible figure

3. Who pays for on-road cycling?

Urban roads are partly paid for by ratepayers (through Local Authority rates allocated to roading), and partly by car owners (such as through petrol taxes). Most adult cyclists are also car owners and so pay for their own road use, either as a rate payer or as a motorist.

Note local authority and national budgets for cycling are typically a few percent of the total roading and transport budget. Under New Zealand’s sustainable transport strategy such budgets are set to increase, though the actual proportions will still remain very small.

4. Why is cycling important?

Cycling is important because it provides both transport and leisure benefits. The direct benefits include improved physical and mental health with reduced health costs, pollution and traffic congestion. Local and national transport authorities are increasingly prioritising cycling because it is pivotal to reducing carbon emissions and ensuring sustainable transport for a vibrant, healthy community.

ENDS

Release Date: 
Friday, 22 September, 2017
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CAN-Media_NZCyclingFacts.pdf198.86 KB
April 10, 2008 Anonymous (not verified)

Comments

Cycling myths debunked

There's no evidence that we are facing a rising tide of traffic crime by people on bicycles, contrary to a recent claim (DomPost letters, 2 Dec)

I agree that we shouldn't tolerate breaking the rules or lack of courtesy, but let's keep this in perspective. Data is not the plural of anecdote.

For every errant cyclist, I could point to 99 examples of unlawful or dangerous driving or jaywalking.

Indeed, Ministry of Justice figures show that cyclist traffic offences total less than 1% of all traffic offences per year. Is this really the top priority for Police?

The Cycling Advocates Network promotes respect through its Stop at Red campaign (can.org.nz/stopatred/),

Regarding the situation Mr Cunneen describes, perhaps he should freshen up his knowledge of the Road Code: a right turning vehicle is required to give way to traffic going straight through.

The fact remains that we all win when more people ride bikes more often. People are healthier, traffic congestion is cut, road building bills are lower, our air is cleaner, and remaining drivers can always find a parking space.

What we need is smart investment in attractive and safe cycle facilities, not finger wagging.

I am helpful with this information as I am thinking to be a cyclist in NZ. Thanks.