The key comparison is fatalities vs. the number of trips taken:
The actual number of Dutch citizens riding bikes is higher than in the UK (approx 12.4m trips per day -1999) and the number of cyclist fatalities that year was 194.
the CTC fact sheet states that in 2009 there were approx 2.5m trips/day and IIRC, in 1999 cyclist fatalities were in the region of 140. I suspect that the number of trips in the UK in 1999 was rather lower than in 2009 and something between 5 and 6 times lower than in the Netherlands, so the fatality rate was far lower.
When comparing international stats, we need to avoid comparing apples and oranges
the point I'm making is that it isn't the Shangri-La that people make it out to be.........
The DfT tells us that in 2009 there were 104 cycling deaths and about 3.1 billion cycling
miles. I think that the number of deaths was higher in 2010, but then cycling rose as well. So - the latest authoritative figures I can find gives 1 UK cycling death per 30,000,000 milles
http://www.dft.gov.u...gb2010roads.pdf page 2
If you take the average number of kilometres per day ridden in the Netherlands as 2.48, multiply by 15,000,000 and then again by 365, and then divide by 162 which is the number of cycling deaths in the Netherlands in 2010 (a considerable drop from 2009), and then convert to miles you get a figure of 1 Netherlands cycling death per 52,000,000 miles. I'm relying on this
Elsewhere the bicycle usage stats are separated. Here we see that the Dutch cycle, on average, 909km per year, which translates to 2.48km per head, per day. This has largely held steady since 1991, the earliest year shown in the chart. http://www.bakfiets-en-meer.nl/2008/12/04/fresh-cycling-statistics-from-the-netherlands/ which may not be authoritative, but is sort of backed up by this
http://www.fietsbera...ument000095.pdf which gives a figure of 2,42km per day in 1999
and, locally, the stats tell a different story. Deaths per mile in London are far lower than the UK average, and, tellingly, weighted toward a particular type of incident that could, with political will, be eliminated.
I'll stand corrected if anybody has a more accurate calculation for the Netherlands, but, for all the pouting and spouting by WalthamForestQuoteWithoutPermissionCrapBlogBoy the numbers scarcely tell a tale of unrelenting carnage in London and unremitting joy in the Netherlands.
(later edit) one thing I will admit is that, having thought the thing through and looked at the numbers the case made by the CTC in it's Safety in Numbers comparison is pretty weak. To my inexpert eye the curve shown on page 2 of the pdf file (page 1 of the document)
http://www.ctc.org.u..._in_Numbers.pdf suggests that there's a lot more variation between countries clustered bottom left than can be explained by the curve.