Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IIT-M) 
Chennai

IIT-M develops integrated road safety dashboard; Odisha adopts platform

By integrating data from multiple departments and presenting it through real-time analytics, the system helps leadership identify high-risk areas, assign responsibility, track interventions and measure outcomes

DTNEXT Bureau

CHENNAI: The Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IIT-M) developed an Integrated Road Safety Dashboard, a digital platform designed to bring together disparate data streams and convert them into actionable policy insights for states and Union Territories.

Conceived as a scalable and replicable digital public infrastructure, the dashboard enables a standardised yet flexible approach to road safety management, allowing governments to align it with their own governance structures and safety strategies. By integrating data from multiple departments and presenting it through real-time analytics, the system helps leadership identify high-risk areas, assign responsibility, track interventions and measure outcomes.

Developed by RBG Labs at IIT-M, the platform enables coordinated, data-driven decision-making. The platform builds on the Integrated Road Accidents Database (iRAD), now known as eDAR, the national accident database. While eDAR strengthened accident data collection, states sought tools that could translate data into decisions and monitoring. "This is not just a technology platform; it is a governance reform tool," RBG Labs head Venkatesh Balasubramanian said.

With features ranging from executive dashboards and location intelligence to a citizen portal for reporting hazards and accidents, the system aims to institutionalise accountability and transparency.

The Odisha government recently launched the dashboard as part of the ongoing Road Safety Month 2026 initiatives.

"The dashboard provides the analytical backbone and monitoring we need for sustained enforcement and interventions," said Amitabh Thakur, Transport Commissioner and chairman of the Transport Authority there. "By adopting a data-driven, human factors-based approach, we are equipping our officers with modern tools to improve enforcement and ultimately save lives," he added.

Road safety has emerged as a national priority, with the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways and State governments increasingly recognising the need for systematic, evidence-based interventions. However, the challenge cuts across departments, including transport, police, road-owning agencies, health and urban development, often resulting in siloed action and limited accountability.

Highlighting the significance of the initiative, IIT-M director V Kamakoti said road safety demands coordinated institutional action and intelligent use of data. "This dashboard shows how academic research and technological innovation can directly support governance and public service delivery," he said.

DMK, Congress seal it at 28 Assembly seats

Contest has always been between AIADMK and DMK, Vijay can only be spoiler this time: Semmalai

Suburban stress: Skipped stops, surge in auto fares add to EMU tensions

Incomplete Thiru Vi Ka bus terminus opens to lukewarm response from public

CM Stalin lays foundation stone for Guindy ecological park