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Speed limit on rural local roads to reduce from 80km/h to 60km/h this Friday

Speed limit on rural local roads to reduce from 80km/h to 60km/h this Friday
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On Friday, February 7th, the speed limit on all of Waterford’s rural local roads, outside of urban centres, will be reduced from 80 kilometres per hour to 60 kilometres per hour.

The ‘Slower Speeds, Safer Roads’ campaign, recently launched by Ministers O’Brien and Canney, highlights the forthcoming change in speed limits on rural local roads.

In line with the ‘Vision Zero’ aspiration for 2050 adopted across EU Member States, Ireland’s Government Road Safety Strategy 2021–2030 has the primary aim of reducing the number of deaths and serious injuries on Irish roads by 50% by 2030.

International research indicates that speed is a contributory factor in a third of fatal collisions and that reducing speed significantly reduces road deaths. Under the Phase 1 action plan for the Strategy, a working group of relevant stakeholders and subject matter experts was convened to review speed limits and to make recommendations to help set consistent and appropriate speed limits across the road network. The working group comprised the Department of Transport, Road Safety Authority (RSA), An Garda Síochána, Transport Infrastructure Ireland (TII), the National Transport Authority (NTA), and the County and City Management Association (CCMA).

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Speaking of the change, Gabriel Hynes, Senior Engineer with Waterford City and County Council said, “All local rural roads in Waterford, outside of urban centres, will be subject to a reduction in speed limits from 80km/h to 60km/h.  These roads are denoted as L-roads on the road network.”

“A key objective of this change is to keep road users safe and that includes motorists, cyclists, pedestrians, in fact, everyone using our roads.”

Mr. Hynes added, “From midnight on Friday all speed limit signs on Waterford’s rural local roads will reflect the new speed limit of 60 km/h. In cases where a striped ‘rural speed limit sign’ (a white circle with three diagonal black lines) is used as an alternative to numeric speed limit signs on specific single-lane rural roads, it will also now mean that a maximum 60km/h limit is in force.”

Findings from the Speed Limit Review, which was published in 2023, highlighted that the risk of being killed is much greater for collisions between a car and a vulnerable road user at 50 km/h when compared with the same type of collision at 30km/h.

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Visit gov.ie/speedlimits to find out more about the new slower speed limits.

For the latest Waterford News and Sport, tune into WLR News on the hour and download the WLR App for news on demand.

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