Australian road deaths down

Acting Prime Minister Michael McCormack has warned against complacency despite the national road toll falling 6.4 per cent in 2018.

national road toll

The national road toll is down but we're being urged to do better. (AAP)

Australia's road toll has fallen to its lowest in four years, with 78 fewer deaths in 2018 than the previous year.

There were 1146 deaths on the nation's roads in the 12 months to December, a 6.4 per cent drop from 2017 when 1224 were killed.

That's the lowest total since 2014, according to the Bureau of Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Economics.

Despite the improvement, Acting Prime Minister Michael McCormack says there needs to be focus on ways the toll can be driven down further.

"One road death or accident is one too many and the release of these recent national road death figures should serve as a reminder to all road users and stakeholders, including all governments, to be ever-vigilant and work harder to achieve improvements," Mr McCormack said.

"The ultimate safety outcome we are all striving for is a target of zero road deaths and serious injuries in Australia."

The analysis showed Victoria experienced a 17.4 per cent drop, with 259 deaths in 2017 and 214 in 2018.

There was a 19 per cent fall in fatalities in South Australia where 100 people died in 2017 and 81 in 2018.

NSW reported a nine per cent decline, with 389 killed in 2017 compared to 354 in 2018.

Tasmania had a 2.9 per cent drop and Western Australia a 0.6 per cent fall, while Queensland had the same number as the previous year.

The Northern Territory and ACT recorded increases.

Mr McCormack, also the infrastructure minister, noted the broader impact of road accidents on victims' families and emergency service workers.

He urged people to take responsibility for their actions on the roads to help prevent deaths.

"While we have seen some improvement on the number of road deaths in 2018, we can do even better by ensuring basic safety steps are followed," the Nationals leader said.


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Source: AAP


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