that they should, as soon as possible, sign and/ or initiate procedure for ratification of the Conventions and Agreements and apply the Resolutions of the ECE listed in the Appendix hereto in cases where this has not already been done;
that they should implement, if they have not already done so, the following road safety Resolutions adopted by the ECMT on 5th October 1960 :Resolution No. 11 concerning the education of road users;Resolution No. 12 concerning the measures to counter drunkenness among road users;Resolution No. 13 concerning driving licences, the establishment of a file of convictions and infringements of the Highway Code, and first aid;
1. Convention on Road Traffic, of 19th September 1949
Entered into force on 26th March 1952
Member countries of the Council of Europe having signed and ratified :
| Austria | Luxembourg |
| Belgium | Netherlands |
| Denmark | Norway |
| France | Sweden |
| Greece | Turkey |
| Italy | United Kingdom |
The Convention lays down basic traffic rules (overtaking, crossing, turning, etc.) and also prescribes the obligatory equipment for motorcars (such as front and tear lights and registration numbers). The Annexes to the Convention contain details on equipment, weight, dimensions and identification marks of other motor vehicles used in international traffic and a model driving permit.
2. Protocol on road signs and signals, of 19th September 1949
Entered into force on 20th December 1953
Member countries of the Council of Europe having signed and ratified :
| Austria | Italy |
| Belgium | Luxembourg |
| Denmark | Netherlands |
| France | Sweden |
| Greece |
Norway has signed the Protocol but has not ratified it.
The Protocol sets out the size and colour of 22 danger signs, 20 signs giving definite instructions and 12 information signs.
3. European Agreement supplementing the 1949 Convention on road traffic and the 1949 Protocol on road signs and signals, of 16th September 1950
Entered into force on 20th December 1953
Member countries of the Council of Europe having signed and ratified:
| Austria | Italy |
| Belgium | Luxembourg |
| France | Netherlands |
| Greece |
In this Agreement several articles of the above Convention and Protocol have been elaborated in greater detail.
4. Agreement on signs for roadworks, amending the European Agreement of 16th September 1950 (Item 3), of 16th December 1955
Not yet in force
Final signature : France
Accession or ratification by member countries of the Council of Europe :
| Belgium | Luxembourg |
| Italy | Netherlands |
Countries which have signed the Agreement but have not ratified it : Austria and Greece.
This Agreement cannot enter into force until Austria and Greece, Contracting Parties to the Agreement (Item 3), have ratified it.
5. European Agreement on road markings, of 13th December 1957
Entered into force on 10th August 1960
Member countries of the Council of Europe having signed or ratified :
| Belgium | France |
Countries which have signed the Agreement but have not ratified it,
| Fed. Rep. of Germany | Netherlands |
| Italy | Turkey |
| Luxembourg | United Kingdom |
This Agreement is concerned, in particular, with the continuous and broken lines indicating whether or not drivers can cross from one lane to another.
- Resolution No. 91 on Road Markings, adopted by the Road Transport Sub-committee of the ECE Inland Transport Committee on 10th October 1958.
This Resolution completes the European Agreement on Road Markings of 13th December 1957 and recommends that Governments should include certain provisions in their regulations or instructions to the authorities responsible for highway construction and maintenance.
- Resolution No. 76 concerning objects protruding beyond the bonnet or over the sides of the vehicle, adopted by the Road Transport Subcommittee of the ECE Inland Transport Committee on 14th October 1955.
This Resolution recommends that there should not be at any point in the body-work of a motor-vehicle ahead of the windscreen any technically non-essentialfeature facing forward that is pointed or sharp or makes an acute angle or constitutes a dangerous projection which might seriously aggravate the risk of physical injury to other road-users.
- Resolution No. 75 on the Colour of Direction Indicator Lights, adopted by the Road Transport Sub-committee of the ECE Inland Transport Committee on 14th October 1955.
In this Resolution the Sub-committee recommends that Governments should advise manufacturers and importers that orange should be exclusively used for direction indicators fitted to new vehicles registered on their territory.
- Resolution No. 80 on the Technical Inspection of Motor Vehicles, adopted by the Road Transport Sub-committee of the ECE Inland Transport Committee on 21st September 1956.
This Resolution requires taxis, motor-vehicles and trailers used for passenger transport and motor-vehicles used for goods transport, to undergo at least once a year a technical inspection in order to ascertain whether the vehicle satisfies the statutory requirements, particularly in regard to lights and headlamps.