The facts – VIC ROADS!
Speeding increases crashes
Exceeding the speed limit increases the likelihood of a crash. In poor driving conditions, a crash is more likely if you drive at an inappropriate speed. The speed limit is the maximum allowable speed, but sometimes it is necessary to travel below the speed limit to stay safe.
As your speed increases, your ability to react to emergencies is reduced and stopping distances increase. Other road users also find it more difficult to judge how fast you are travelling.
The faster you drive, the harder you hit
At higher speeds there is a greater likelihood of severe injury or death. Even small increases in travel speed can cause disproportionately large increases in the likelihood of a crash that causes death or serious injury. In a crash your body will keep moving at the travel speed of the vehicle.
Small speed reductions save lives
Research shows that the risk of injury in a crash doubles with a 5 km/h increase in travel speed. Travelling at 65 km/h in a 60 km/h zone, you are twice as likely to be involved in a crash. A car braking from 65 km/h will still be travelling at 32 km/h at the point where a vehicle braking from 60 km/h has stopped.
Pedestrians are vulnerable to speed
For vulnerable road users, such as pedestrians, small differences in travelling speed can mean the difference between life and death. If you collide with a pedestrian, death or serious injury is likely even at relatively low speeds. Lower travelling speeds on our urban roads have contributed to significant reductions in pedestrian fatalities and serious injuries since 2001.
Road trauma costs Victoria
The cost of road trauma to the community is too high. The economic cost of road casualty crashes in Victoria is estimated to be more then $2.9 billion. But the financial cost is nothing compared with the emotional cost to families and friends of losing a loved one on the road.
Slowing down saves lives
Small changes in speed can result in significant reductions in road trauma. Put simply, slowing down saves lives. Research shows that just a 10 per cent reduction in average vehicle travelling speeds could reduce road deaths by 40 per cent.
Speeding saves little time
It’s true! Speeding is a major contributor to Victorian road deaths and trauma, and yet brings about only minor reductions in travel time. On a 10 km journey, you would save 46 seconds by increasing your average speed from 60km/h to 65km/h, but you double your chances of being involved in a crash.
Speeding damages the environment
Increasing your speed also increases dangerous vehicle emissions that damage the environment.