Trucking industry launches safety research plan

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Trucking industry launches safety research plan
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Posted by Rita Mu

The Australian Trucking Association (ATA) will fund a series of truck and trailer safety research projects for the United Nations’ Decade of Action for Road Safety collaboration.
 

Governments, international agencies, civil society organisations and private companies from more than 100 countries have agreed to take part in the UN collaboration, which aims to reduce the number of road crash fatalities across the world.

Road accidents kill more than 1.3 million people a year, according to the ATA.

The Chief Executive of the ATA, Stuart St Clair, said the association would support the UN Decade of Action by funding a safety research program.

“The trucking industry has dramatically improved its safety over the last twenty years, thanks to the efforts of the ATA, trucking operators and governments,” Mr St Clair said.

“We need to keep improving the industry’s safety, but governments and businesses need to base their safety decisions on evidence and a clear understanding of the costs and benefits of possible safety measures. After all, the community only has a limited amount of money: it needs to be spent where it will get the best results.

As the first step in the research program, the ATA has commissioned the Centre for Automotive Safety Research (CASR) at the University of Adelaide to prepare an overview report into heavy vehicle safety.

The report will:

• provide evidence about the safety measures that work – and the ones that don’t;
• identify the gaps in what we know about how to make heavy vehicles safer;
• recommend priorities for follow-up research;
• provide an authoritative reference guide to the research already been carried out into truck and trailer safety. This research, published in a host of different academic journals, reports and studies, is often difficult to find, particularly for people in the industry who need guidance into how to make their businesses safer.

“The results of the project will help guide the direction of the ATA’s future safety research,” St Clair said.

Lead researcher, CASR Senior Research Fellow Dr Jeremy Woolley, who has has conducted extensive research into road safety issues, including the effects of lowering speed limits, drink driving enforcement, and road safety advertising campaigns, will present the findings of the research project at the 2011 Australian Trucking Convention.

The 2011 Australian Trucking Convention will be held from 25-28 May at the National Convention Centre in Canberra. More information and to register is available HERE.
 


 

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