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1.
Introduction
The purpose of Federal Motor
Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) No. 214, Side Impact
Protection, is to reduce the risk of serious and fatal injury
to occupants of passenger cars, multipurpose passenger vehicles,
trucks and buses in side impact crashes. The final rule for the
crash test portions of the standard was phased-in beginning with
1994 model year (MY) production passenger cars and required 100
percent compliance by 1997 MY. In Europe, although efforts for
developing a side impact regulation have been in process for many
years, it is only recently that European Union (EU) Directive 96/27/EC
was adopted. In general, both the U.S. and the EU side impact
standards address the same safety needs, i.e., to reduce
fatalities and injuries in side crashes. However, there are major
variations in test procedures and performance criteria between
the two that may lead to or require different vehicle designs,
creating barriers to trade that are inconsistent with the New
Transatlantic Agenda and Action Plan signed by President Clinton
in December 1995 in Madrid. Speaking at the Conference of
Enhanced Safety of Vehicles in May 1996, spokesmen for domestic
and foreign automobile manufacturers expressed similar concerns
over the differences in the U.S. and EU side impact regulations.
On September 16, 1996, Congressional conferees noted these
variations in the standards and stated that such "differences
are inconsistent with the need for the International
Harmonization of motor vehicle safety standards." The
conferees directed the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration (NHTSA) to study these differences and to submit a
report to the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations by
April 30, 1997, outlining the agency's plan for achieving
harmonization of side impact standards.
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