It took years to come up with a plan to cut road deaths, and just 11 days to kill it
https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/it-took-years-to-come-up-with-a-plan-to-cut-road-deaths-and-just-11-days-to-kill-it-20251129-p5njg5.htmlOpen linkView original on aussie.zone
I'll be honest, I'm more interested in speed limits and road design within cities than I am in rural areas. But this is still a major loss for evidence-based policy. We're not talking lowering the speed limit on major highways, just on minor, often poorly maintained, rural roads.
The first comment I see when I look at the comments on the article is particularly upsetting:
Why we use trucks for freight as much we do is beyond me. Any route that sees more than 2 road trains per day should be served by rail. And maybe we could improve our passenger rail while we're at it.
Tony Abbott had Lindsay Fox "toys" on his prime ministerial book shelves as an examplw.
Why ? becase we keep.voting for politcans who have little interst in rail or oublic tranzport in general.
Even when we do something belated, like the Inland.Rail project, it doesn't go to the port in Brisbane, nor carries in to port of Gladstone but ends in teucking depot in Brisbane.
As many people were killed by traffic murders on the day of the Boncli shootings as by gun.
Fuck that's a good stat to have. Do you have a good source I can use to point to it?
It won’t be accurate; I found only four across four states. The others won’t have 13 or more.
There will be no source provided, except "Trust me, bro", because is not true. Unless OP meant globally...
Rail is bloody expensive to build and to maintain. Not to mention that you still need trucks to deliver from train station to the destination. Trucks makes much more sense.
Absolutely untrue. Rail is insanely cheap to maintain, compared to roads. Especially roads taking heavy freight. The amount of damage a car does to the road increases by the 4th power of its weight. Meaning Carey twice the weight, do 16 time the damage to the road.
Plus, they can take much, much higher volumes of cargo. One train can carry as much as 4 road trains and not even be an especially noteworthy freight train. So operation costs are lower.
And they're safer, since rails are not shared with cars and are a more controlled route.
Yes, upfront costs are higher, but after that it's literally all wins.
Very often you do not need "higher volumes of cargo." And you still need trucks to get cargo from train to final destination. Rail is dead for a reason.
The reason road trains exist is to make trucks more efficient than normal trucks by transporting in bulk - instead of carrying the weight of multiple trucks + cargo, it's only one big truck. More efficient, and therefore cheaper.
Rail is even more efficient than road trains at transporting in bulk from region to region, as they don't waste energy on friction, and are even better at carrying in bulk. Road trains don't exist in most countries because they usually have rail to take its place, trucks have their niche in the first and last legs within small regions. After all, moving a truck across regions is less efficient (and therefore more expensive to do).
The only form of transport more efficient than freight trains are cargo ships, which can't go inland. There's a reason mining companies often build their own freight railways to transport between mine and port.
Australia is finishing a build of Inland Rail, a rail freight corridor right now. I'd hardly call it dead when we are expanding the rail network. Admittedly the initial build is over budget, but the initial build is always the most expensive part.
The reason is that there is profit to be made by inefficiency.
When rail is used, the people who profit are;
When Trucks are used, the people who profit are;
These are all at the expense of;
Sounds to me like the fix there is to better maintain rural roads, rather than lower the speed limit and let them further deteriorate?
That's really expensive, and they're lightly used as most people are using the highways. It's hard to justify the expense
Sure, I can see how expense is not equal (especially comparing infrastructure use say compared to an Asian country).. but a lot of the rural roads are how you access farms and farms are fairly important.
Sure, but access doesn't need to be at 100km/h. You only lose a few minutes at each end going from a rural road to a well maintained one at 80
A relatively small 180km drive will add an extra half an hour on the trip (about 25% longer). Not really what id classify as just a few minutes at each end. Sure it's only a few minutes when you're travelling 30km around metro.
Hahahahahahahahahahaha
Ha.
FFS.
Their family at home or the one in hell?
People always overestimate how much time they save when driving faster.
If you were travelling 100km at 100km/h it would take you and hour to get to your destination.
At 80km/h it would take you 1h15m.
If you were travelling half that distance you would only be saving 8 minutes.
Y'all want to risk dying to save maybe 8 minutes? It's not only your driving you need to worry about, it's other people on the road.
Kinda like every time they wanted to introduce a speed limit on the Autobahn. Not a lower speed limit, just a speed limit in general.
You can't do that to all the drongos driving their leased performance cars I guess...
People don't want to drive arbitrarily slower. Build roads that are uncomfortable to drive fast on. Counterintuitively making thin roads, without large runoffs can make driving safer because people feel more in danger and thus slow down.
Shouldn't have taken them years to figure out it was a poor idea but I guess that's what you get when there's such a vested interest in demonising speed. I'm quite happy it got kiboshed - it's a rare case of government actually listening to the people.
It didn't take them years to figure it out. It took them years of collecting the evidence proving that it's a good idea. Then 11 days of listening to reactionary morons telling them not to do it was all it took to kill it.
Who'd they ask? Not me.