150 extra emergency areas confirmed for motorways - including on the M5 and M6
National Highways has announced where 150 extra emergency areas are to be created in a bid to make smart motorways safer.
They include parts of the M5 and M6 in our region, where there are long stretches of motorway with no conventional hard shoulder,
In April, the Government announced the cancellation of planned projects to build all-lane running (ALR) smart motorways, which can use the hard shoulder as a live traffic lane.
An extra six refuge areas have already been created on the M6 through Staffordshire
Eleven stretches of motorways in England have also already identified to be upgraded with the places to stop, while work is already underway on doubling the number of areas on the M1 in south Yorkshire.
In the Midlands, the M5 stretch from junction 4a near Halesowen to junction 6 near Worcester will be updated.
On the M6 north of the West Midlands, junction 21a to 26 between Warrington and Wigan will now include more than double the originally planned places for drivers to stop in an emergency.
Large sections of the M1 in the Midlands will also see extra safety measures.
The work is part of a £900 million scheme aimed at improving the network by 2025, while a total of £105 million is being spent on improving operational technology.
It has been announced following consistent calls from safety campaigners for a halt to the use of hard shoulders for traffic.
There have been a number of serious accidents linked to the system, including the death of Anthony Marston, of Telford, who broke down on the M6 near junction 10a near Hilton Park in 2016 and was struck by a lorry driven by Michael Preston, who was later jailed for 32 months.
Nick Harris, chief executive of National Highways, said: "Safety is our highest priority and we are committed to further improving all-lane running motorways.
"We have completed key upgrades to improve the performance of technology to detect stopped vehicles, and today we have set out the next sections of motorway to benefit from the programme to install more than 150 extra emergency areas to give drivers added reassurance.
"We are also continuing to invest £105 million to improve the resilience of our operational technology systems."
Edmund King, president of the AA motoring group, welcomed the additional safety measures but called for hard shoulders to be reinstated on all motorways.
He said: "The fundamental problem remains that stopped vehicle incidents are more frequent on all-lane running 'smart' motorways compared to motorways with hard shoulders.
"To address this, the hard shoulder needs to be reinstated or at the very least the number of emergency areas needs to be radically increased.
"The prospect of breaking down or stopping in a live lane is daunting as our AA call centre operators who take the distressed calls can confirm.
"The advice remains that if you break down in a live lane and can't exit the vehicle safely via the passenger seat, you should keep your seat belt on, put on hazard lights and other lights and dial 999. It is an emergency.
"We welcomed the scrapping of new 'smart' motorways but even with the progress made with new technology on existing ones, more needs to be done to reduce the dangers of live lane stops.
"We have called for more 'controlled motorways', which the report shows have lower killed or serious injury rates (KSI) than all-lane running (1.31 compared to 1.43). These motorways have the benefit of 'smart' motorway technology whilst also having a hard shoulder."
A National Highways spokesman said the report "includes the safety evidence (2017 to 2021), which continues to show that overall, all three types of smart motorway are safer than conventional motorways in terms of deaths or serious injuries".
He added: "Together, the investment in extra emergency areas, along with additional technology like stopped vehicle detection (SVD), better and more signs for emergency areas, and more information about smart motorways online and in an updated Highway Code, aims to help road users feel even safer and more confident on the strategic road network."
Work had already begun in June on more than doubling the number of emergency areas on the M1 in South Yorkshire between junctions 32 and 35a.
An additional five emergency areas were also added on the M6 in Staffordshire and eight on the M1 in Bedfordshire and Northamptonshire while motorway upgrades were carried out.
Additional emergency areas:
M6 Staffordshire: Six new refuges already created
M6 junction 21a to 26 in Cheshire
M5 junction 4a to 6 in Worcestershire
M1 junction 16 to 19 in Northamptonshire
M1 junction 23a to 25 in Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire
M1 junction 28 to 30 and 30 to 31 in Derbyshire
M3 junction 2 to 4a in Surrey and Hampshire
M4 junction 10 to 12 in Berkshire
M20 junction 3 to 5 in Kent
M25 junction 5 to 7 in Surrey and Kent
M27 junction 4 to 11 in Hampshire