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TOURISTS and residents have never known speed limits on the long, straight roads of the Northern Territory, an area in Australia that is five times the size of the United Kingdom.
Carmakers are even drawn to the region to test high-speed models on the thousands of miles of open road.
But, faced with the worst road safety figures in the developed world, the regional parliament has decided to impose speed limits on the last unrestricted roads in the southern hemisphere.
A report tabled yesterday in the Northern Territory parliament in Darwin said that the high speeds combined with frequent drink driving, an aversion to wearing seatbelts and a blatant disregard for red lights combined to produce unusually high road fatality statistics.
The road fatality rate in the Northern Territory, Australia’s least-populated region, which stretches from the far north to the centre of the country, is 26 deaths per 100,000 people — the rate in the United Kingdom is 6 per 100,000.
Clare Martin, the chief minister of the Northern Territory, raised the prospect of speed limits, saying: “We Territorians drink and drive, we travel too far without rest, we drive too fast. We run red lights and we don’t wear seatbelts.” But she faces a tough challenge in convincing her electorate of the benefits of a 110 km/h (70mph) speed limit on all the main roads of the Northern Territory, including the 3,000km (1,800-mile) Stuart Highway south to Adelaide.
Territorians argue that the vast distances between towns and sparse traffic make high speeds a necessity. Terry Mills, an opposition MP, said yesterday: “There is no clear link between speed on our open roads and fatalities. They are largely caused by alcohol and a failure to wear seatbelts. So it would be a very naive approach to attack this [speed] issue. We need to stand by Territorians and leave things as they are.”
The report tabled yesterday in the parliament argued that the case for speed limits was overwhelming. It said: “More than half of all fatal crashes in the NT are run-off-road or overturned crashes that imply loss of control and excessive speed. No matter how safely you drive, you are at risk from other motorists travelling at high speed.”
But manufacturers of high-speed cars gave warning that speed limits would reduce the appeal of the region as a testing ground for new models. Paul Ellis, spokesman for Porsche Australia, said that the company tested its cars there for speed and heat.
Four six-cylinder 911 Turbos and three support vehicles were put through their paces in the Territory for two weeks in August, he said.
Mr Ellis added that if speed limits were introduced the Territory would also lose the economic benefits of testing teams spending weeks in its hotels and restaurants.
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