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Last month, a speeding car driven by an 80-something person collided with another car in the southern port city of Busan and then plowed into a grandmother and her granddaughter walking nearby, resulting in their deaths.
Months earlier, multiple people were injured in the southeastern city of Changwon after a five-vehicle crash caused by a 73-year-old driver.
Both drivers claimed their cars began suddenly accelerating outside their control, but the accidents renewed safety concerns about elderly people being behind the wheel.
For years, fatal accidents involving elderly drivers have been on the rise in South Korea, which is widely expected to become a super-aged society in 2025. A super-aged society means the proportion of those aged 65 and older will hit 20 percent of the total population.
According to government data, traffic accidents caused by drivers aged 65 and older jumped to 114,795 in 2020, compared with 86,304 in 2016.
Licensed drivers aged 65 and older caused 92.74 accidents per every 100,000 on the road in 2018, compared with 49.77 per every 100,000 for 30-something drivers, according to data from Samsung Traffic Safety Research Institute.
Deadly accidents involving older drivers resulted in the deaths of 2.9 per 100 cases, compared with 1.7 per 100 with drivers under the age of 64, the data showed.
"Although the population of over-65 people increased, the pace of growth in car accidents involving them was significantly higher than their population growth," Cho Joon-hwan, a senior researcher at the Samsung Institute, said in a report.
"To cope with a super-aged society, customized measures are necessary to deal with elderly drivers in high-risk groups," Cho said.
According to the Samsung Institute, the number of licensed drivers aged 65 and older is expected to surge to 9.88 million in 2030, compared with 3.33 million in 2019.
To combat rising traffic accidents involving seniors, the Korean National Police Agency has been pushing to issue conditional licenses for elderly people, potentially from 2025.
A conditional license allows people to drive with certain limitations. For instance, nighttime or highway driving could be limited, depending on a driver's health. Currently, conditional licenses are issued to some people with disabilities in South Korea.
Starting in March, police will begin research to assess an elderly driver's driving aptitude using virtual reality. A total of 3.6 billion won (US$3.1 million) has been set aside over the next three years for the development of virtual reality-based tests.
"Recently, the license renewal period for elderly drivers was shortened, and there is a need for the authorities to introduce conditional licenses," said Kim Pil-soo, a professor of automotive engineering at Daelim University.
Under the law, people aged 65 or older are defined as elderly drivers. For people aged 75 and older, the government shortened their license renewal period to every three years from every five.
The administration has also asked drivers aged 65 and older to voluntarily give up their licenses.
However, only about 2 percent of elderly drivers, or 76,000, surrendered their licenses in 2020.
To encourage elderly people to stop driving, municipal governments, including Seoul, Daegu and Incheon, have implemented an incentive program that provides 100,000 won (around US$83) transportation allowance per month to senior drivers who voluntarily return their licenses.
Police have also provided part of its budget to local governments to help pay for the transportation allowance.
Despite such incentives, persuading elderly drivers to give up their licenses is difficult, as it could affect their livelihoods or raise emotional concerns for some seniors.
"I think I will feel so sad if I give up my driver's license," said Kim Hyung-il, a 76-year-old resident in Seoul. "Because it will be the last time I drive in my life."
Besides policy measures, innovative technologies in driving are expected to curb car accidents involving elderly people.
As the nation is set to usher in the super-aged society, the auto industry picked up speed in adopting safety and healthcare technologies for cars.
These days, most new cars are equipped with Advanced Driver Assistance Systems.
The new technology makes a vehicle stop when it detects obstacles not seen by drivers. It also enables cars to stay within their lanes and not go over the speed limit.
Using artificial intelligence and deep learning technologies, a vehicle can recognize and respond to the surrounding environment in real time ― the safety system can send an alert to the driver to wake up if the system recognizes drowsy driving.
Hyundai Mobis, an affiliate of Hyundai Motor, has developed a warning system that can recognize a driver's face and even track their eyes.
The system, which analyzes the driver's facial biometric data and warns about careless driving, will be a fixture in most of Hyundai's cars. (Yonhap)