Ben Webster, Transport Correspondent
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Teenage drivers are three times as likely to have a fatal crash if they are travelling with a group of friends as when driving alone, a study has found.
The greatest danger is posed during the first 30 weeks after passing their test. After that, the risk that they will cause a death or serious injury on the road halves.
The Association of British Insurers , which publishes the findings in a report today, is urging the Government to introduce restrictions on young drivers for six months after they qualify.
The association says that 270 deaths or serious injuries a year would be prevented by a law limiting drivers aged under 20 to carrying no more than one teenage passenger for the first six months after they qualify.
The report says: “Young passengers can both distract young drivers and encourage them to drive in a more risky way. Restricting drivers under 20 to carrying just one teenage passenger for the first six months of driving will allow them to gain experience of carrying passengers before having to deal with the distraction of three or four of their teenage peers in the car.”
Yesterday a teenage driver died and three people, also believed to be in their late teens, were seriously hurt in a crash, police said. The Vauxhall Corsa collided with a Land Rover Discovery in Malvern. The Corsa driver was airlifted to Worcester Royal Hospital, where he died. The other driver did not need hospital treatment.
The Department for Transport has acknowledged the evidence of benefits from placing conditions on the licences of young drivers. Several US states have limited the number of passengers a teenage driver can carry in the first six or 12 months: on average, fatal crashes fell by 37 per cent after the limits were introduced.
The report from the association says that the collision rate for young drivers increases with each additional passenger carried. Compared with driving alone, the risk of a fatal collision for young drivers is 39 per cent higher with one passenger, 85 per cent higher with two and 182 per cent higher with three or more. Overall, teenage drivers are twice as likely as those aged over 30 to kill or injure passengers.
The department is focusing on making the driving test more rigorous and has doubts about the practicality of restrictions that require police to determine the age of passengers. However, Nick Starling, of the insurers’ association, said: “Government proposals will not reduce significantly the unacceptable casualty rate among young drivers and their passengers.
“We want a six-month limit on the number of teenage passengers, which will result in far fewer tragedies.”
The association said the limit would reduce the cost of insurance for teenage drivers because the number of multimillion-pound claims would fall.
— Thousands of parents and grandparents are unwittingly committing insurance fraud and putting their children at risk of fines and penalty points as they prepare to drive off to university, a report says.
Research from Zurich Insurance reveals that a tenth of parents who have helped children to buy a car insured it in their own name, not realising that they could be breaking the law. Known as “fronting”, the practice involves one person insuring a car and adding a “named driver” to the policy even though that person is the main or only driver.
More than half (59 per cent) of more than 1,000 parents and grandparents surveyed did not realise that fronting is illegal. Two thirds (68 per cent) admitted they did it to help to reduce premiums.
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Chris - that's because you're in a relativly high-risk group. (Sorry to point out the blatantly obvious, but...)
Joe Hander, Bristrol, UK
The British Insurance system tars all young people with the same brush, no matter their driving history.
I am 22, live in deepest Suffolk, only drive during uni holidays, have never crashed or been cited, yet no insurance company will insure me for less than 1000 on a 1.1 Smart ForFour!
Chris, Bristol,