Tag: speed limiter

  • No going back on Sept. 1 speed limiter deadline, says FRSC

    No going back on Sept. 1 speed limiter deadline, says FRSC

    Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) Corps Marshal Boboye Oyeyemi has said there is no going back on the September 1 deadline on the speed limiter for commercial vehicles.

    The enforcement will be nationwide. Opeyemi spoke at the opening of the maiden edition of the four-day training organised by the Corps.

    The yearly event was for members of the Petroleum Tanker Drivers (PTD) chapter of the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas workers (NUPENG). It took place at White Sand, Orile-Iganmu, Lagos, trailer park.

    Oyeyemi said:“With the use of this device, especially by commercial vehicles, speed-related accidents are expected to be reduced to the barest,” oyeyemi said.

    Similar training with the theme: “Drivers certification for safety on wheels,” was held at trailer parks at Ogere, Ogun State, Eiye-Nkorin, Kwara State and Suleja and Taffa, in Niger State.

    The training also held at Mararaba in Jos, Calabar, Port Harcourt, Lukpanta, Warri, Oghara and Benin.

    He said efforts by the PTD to promote safety consciousness among its members, especially given the unenviable accident-prone status of most tankers and trailers on the roads.

    “The training, which would focus on specialised knowledge for drivers to ensure they comply with international best practices, would complement the intensive patrol, and strict enforcement of traffic regulations as well as robust public enlightenment programme being pursued by the Corps to bring the situation under control,” Oyeyemi said.

    Oyeyemi said it would go a long way in erasing the uneviable statistics, which indicate that over 120 lives were lost and several people injured between March and July, in crashes involving tankers and trailers.

    He said the record also showed that tankers/trailers accounted for over 22 percent of the vehicles involved in crashes since 2012. A sizeable percentage of victims, he said, fall within the productive age bracket of the national population. The development negatively affects the nation’s economic growth.

    Soliciting for continued support to make the roads safer, he said the FRSC was committed to attaining 50 per cent reduction in road crashes and fatalities by end of the year as contained in the Accra Declaration of 2007, and the United Nations Decade of Action for Road Safety 2011-2020.

    He advised truck drivers to fix retro-reflective tapes on their vehicle, ensure the vehicles are fitted with good brakes and tyres before setting out on  journey. He noted that the corps would no longer allow rickety vehicles on the highways and underage drivers (below 27 years), or anyone without a valid drivers’ licence, to drive.

    The PTD National Chairman, Comrade Salmon Oladiti, said the training became imperative because of the increasing involvement of tankers in accidents with attendant loss of lives and properties.

    He praised the FRSC for providing technical support for the training, adding that the training was another demonstration of PTD leadership and members commitment to quality services.

    The training, he said, will be regular and hold at locations where tanker drivers meet, socialise and rest. It will be carried out and certified by the institution responsible for safety on the highways and address the three major components of tanker driving —“skill, health and ethics.”

    He urged tanker drivers to cooperate to make the road safer for other road users.

    Oladiti appealed to Major Oil and Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN) and Private Petroleum Depot Owners of Nigeria (PPDON) to support the training and retraining of tanker drivers to make the roads safer.

    NUPENG President Igwe Achese said the training would enable the corps and stakeholders ensure, henceforth, an improvement in the driving culture of tanker drivers.

    “The training centred on safe driving and vehicle maintenance and the development is expected to reduce carnage on our roads,” Achese said.

    He urged drivers to always embark on defensive driving when on the wheels and to be ambassadors of safety of lives and property.

    He said: “Any driver that drives and arrives at destination is a good driver.” He urged them to ensure they possessed a valid drivers’ licence to be free from harassment.

    “We are very happy with the resolution of the union that any tanker without speed limiter device will not be allowed to load at any depot in the country.

     

  • Speed limiter not available, drivers allege

    Speed limiter not available, drivers allege

    Twenty days to the expiration of the deadline for the installation of speed limiters on commercial vehicles, trucks, trailers and other articulated vehicles, commercial drivers are complaining about the non- availability of the device.

    Those who spoke to The Nation said they could not get the device to buy, arguing that it would be wrong for the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) to begin enforcement under such a situation.

    The deadline for the installation of the device is June 1.

    A driver, Jelil Abdulkareem, who operates at the Ojota Park, said he had gone twice to the accredited retailers of the device but could not get it.

    Another, who identified himself as Abraham, said the device is scarce, wondering how the agency could go ahead with its enforcement when many drivers were yet to get it.

    Lagos State Commissioner for Transportation Kayode Opeifa also raised some of these concerns at the last stakeholders’ meeting, in Lagos last Tuesday.

    He said besides unavailability of the equipment, FRSC must look at the fundamental rights of some individuals, especially, drivers who may insist that they do not need any device to regulate their speed.

    The device, he noted could be introduced where there is growing indiscipline, arising from over-speeding, adding: “The government has a responsibility to ensure that lives are protected. You have no right to kill or maim any Nigerian just because you wanted to make money as a driver. That is why the FRSC has come up with the speed limiter which ensures that it regulates your speed and keep you and others safe.”

    The FRSC Corps Marshal, Boboye Oyeyemi said the limiter is a global solution to reducing the rising road fatalities.

    He said no fewer than 7, 308 lives were lost to road accidents in the past 15 months noting: “At the last year world remembrance for road traffic crashes victims, the focus was on speed, speed is one of the leading causes of death globally.

    “In 2014, we recorded 10, 380 Road Traffic Crashes (RTC) and about 6,000 lives were lost and 2,063 were injured.

    “And for this year, in the first quarter of 2015, we recorded 2,342 RTC while 1,308 lives were lost and these are our future leaders.

    “We have identified, that in all these reports, 50.8 per cent of the crashes were speed related and loss of control carried 16 per cent.

    “Speed is a key factor in crashes and once we can tame this, I am sure things will be much better.

    “This led to the global recommendation that speed limiting devices should be introduced in every country as part of the global strategies to curb losses on roads.”

    The Corps, Oyeyemi said, targets zero death in crashes adding that it is committed to the United Nations Action Plan on reduction of road fatalities by 50 percent.

    He said all the stakeholders agreed to begin the enforcement on June 1.

    Oyeyemi said the enforcement would be in phases, with FRSC starting with commercial vehicles.

    According to him, the organised transport sector has seen the device’s benefits, which he said, include controlling fuel consumption, enhancement of the lifespan of vehicles, elimination of crashes, reduction in carbon emission and zero death.

    He said at the African Action Plan summit held in Accra, Ghana recently, only Kenya had demonstrated a serious implementation of the installation of the device.

    He said the commission had started training its personnel to ensure maximum compliance and enforcement.

    He commended the Federal Government for improved road network stressing however that no road in the country met the minimum requirement of an expressway.

    Minister of Works Mike Onolememen, represented by Mr Adetokunbo Sogbesan, said the menace of Road Traffic Crashes (RTC) had become a concern to the government.

    The Director-General of the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) Dr Joseph Odumodu said the device would be built into the vehicle engines to checkmate speed.

    Odumodu, represented by Mr Richard Adewumi, SON’s Head of Electrical, presented a paper titled: ‘Speed Limiting Devices: Requirements and Specifications for System Components and Implementation’.

    He said: “No matter the level of acceleration the driver want to attained once the maximum speed is set, you can go beyond it.

    “The essence of the standard is to prevent people from committing suicide.’’

    The director said the device has a recorder that could print out the speed record when a driver is stopped by traffic agents.

    He said environmental issues such as temperature, salty water, dust, heat, contaminants, etc were factored into the device for effective operation.

  • ‘No going back on speed limiter’

    ‘No going back on speed limiter’

    The Corps Marshal and Chief Executive Officer, Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) Mr Boboye Oyeyemi, has said that there’s no going back on the use of speed limiter in Nigeria.

    Enforcement of the device’s installation begins across the country on June 1.

    Oyeyemi spoke at the flag-off of Joint Mega Rally, organised by the FRSC and National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) at the Ojota Motor Park in Lagos State. Similar rallies would be organised in the remaining states of the country from next month.

    The Corps Marshal said the device is a speed limiting governor which works by controlling the fuel feed to the engine, mechanical and electronic accelerator in a vehicle, adding that it was introduced to reduce accidents arising from over-speeding.

    During the rally tagged: Towards an enduring safe Road Culture in Nigeria, Oyeyemi said the initiative was not proposed by FRSC but arrived at with the leadership of all transport unions and other stakeholders to raise the level of awareness for an enduring safe road culture.

    He said the unions decided to begin the first stage in Lagos, because the state accounted for almost 40 per cent of vehicular density and chose Ojota Motor Park because of the high number of inter-state buses which daily loads there.

    According to Oyeyemi, the unions are telling Nigerians that they are collaborating with the FRSC to make the roads safer for all users.

    The unions, he said, provided the facilities just as to fulfill their promises in contributing quotas to the safety of life and property on the roads.

    He urged commercial vehicle operators to ensure the speed limiter is installed into their vehicles, noting that it has been agreed by the road union leaders that it must be implemented. He said FRSC has acquired a device that will be used by the FRSC to detect if a vehicle has it or not.

    He said: “The unions have also agreed that on no account must any vehicle leave any Motor Park overloaded. Anyone found overloading is not from any parks and the vehicle must be impounded. He said the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) has also agreed that any tanker or trailer that parks indiscriminately on the road must be prosecuted.”

    The FRSC chief noted that though the level of accidents had gone down, it desired to push it further down if not totally eradicated.

    He appealed to the state governments to support the eradication of the sales of alcohol and drugs in motor parks. He urged motorists to be disciplined, patient and tolerant while on the wheel.

    He urged all road users to be more safety conscious and more tolerant of one another, adding that the Lagos/Ibadan Expressway is not functioning well now due to the ongoing construction.

    He appealed to all the trucks and tankers to always keep to the right lane while driving and urged motorists to abstain from all forms of distractions such as using phone, eating and drinking while driving, noting that driving safely requires absolute concentration.

    The Lagos State Commissioner for Transportation, Kayode Opeifa praised the FRSC and the Corps Marshal (COMAS) for bringing all the stakeholders in transportation industry to Lagos to teach all commercial drivers to observe speed limits.

    He said: “Our goal in Lagos State has always been to spread the gospel of road safety. All commercial operators must conduct their business with the heart of making money without recording casualty. Make all the money you can, but don’t kill anyone in the process.”

    He said some of the issues raised by COMAS among them; over speeding, and the sale of alcohol and drugs are covered in the state’s Traffic Law 2012. “The sale of alcohol or drugs is covered in regulation 31 not just motorparks but 100 metres to any bus stop and garages, while over-speeding carries a fine of N100,000 and a likely loss of your driver’s licence.”

    Opeifa charged the leadership of the drivers union to ensure full compliance with the law to ensure that people don’t drive under the influence of alcohol, or illegal and illicit drugs.

    He said soon, no commercial passenger vehicle in Lagos would be able to operate in Lagos without obtaining passenger insurance.

    He said: “No commercial vehicle driver in Lagos will be qualified to operate without a passenger insurance scheme. Recently, we have signed MoU with four brokers and 100 underwriters and the scheme will soon commence. We have met with your leadership and we have agreed on a rate that would be applicable. This is to ensure that anybody who enters a public transport; be it taxi, okada, tricycle, molue, or mass transit buses in Lagos, or a ferry, is rest assured that if he or she is involved in an accident, he can go to the nearest hospital and be treated free of charge and in the case of death the person is insured to the tune of N2m.” The scheme, he said, would soon come into operation soon.

    He said anybody who is involved in public transportation and moves people must be a professional driver and certified. All such drivers must be qualified to be called drivers.

    He called on the leadership of the unions to ensure that drivers in their garages have the unified motor vehicle drivers’ licence from the FRSC.

    Opeifa reiterated that the state is committed to working with FRSC to ensure safety on the roads.

  • Install speed limiter, FRSC urges motorists

    Install speed limiter, FRSC urges motorists

    The Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) has urged commercial transport operators yet to install a speed limiter in their vehicles to do so before June 1, or face prosecution.

    Its Mowe Unit Commander, Mr Oludare Ogunjobi, gave the charge at a sensitisation for stakeholders on the implementation of the speed limit device, at Obafemi/Owode Local Government Area in Ogun State.

    Ogunjobi said commercial vehicles were expected to have installed the device on or before the deadline, adding that defaulters’ vehicles would be impounded.

    He said the device was introduced to regulate over-speeding which causes accidents.

    Vehicles with the device, he said, would not move beyond the regulated speed limit, no matter the pressure applied on the accelerator.

    Ogunjobi said research has shown that 65 per cent of accidents are caused by over-speeding, with colossal loss of life and property, raising the need for the device for maximum speed control.

    To prevent such fatal crashes, Ogunjobi said it was compulsory for every motorist to for the device.

    The use of a speed limiter, according to Ogunjobi, will guarantee a longer life span for the vehicle and reduce the money spent on fuel and maintenance.

    Ogunjobi urged motorists to support the FRSC campaign, and stop complaining about the N45,000 price for the device.

    Ogunjobi also spoke on the need for vehicle maintenance during the rainy season, urging motorists to take every necessary care while driving during the period.

    He said motorists must ensure their vehicles are in good shape before embarking on any trip during the rain.

    Ogunjobi who noted that lack of maintenance contributes to crashes on the roads, charged motorists to ensure their vehicle’s tyres, brake pads, brake lights, aerial lights, pointers, wind shield wipers and blades, including the headlights are in perfect working condition during and after the rainy season.

    Ogunjobi said they should always turn on their headlights and wipers and reduce their speed whenever it rains.

  • The coming of the speed limiter

    The coming of the speed limiter

    How does a speed limiter work? What are its benefits? These are some of the questions being asked by motorists as the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) begins its enforcement, first, with commercial vehicles in June, reports Adeyinka Aderibigbe

    Nothing underscores the urgent need for speed regulation of drivers than the ghastly Valentine’s Day accident in which some women associates of the wife of the President, Dame Patience Jonathan, died in a crash on the East-West Road, Port-Harcourt, the Rivers State capital.

    “When I saw the pictures, I knew nothing that could have led to such a gory end other than over-speeding,” Mr. Abdul Bamgbopa, a auto track and safety expert told The Nation. The accident has strengthened the case for the speed limiter, which his firm is marketing.

    “It has become more of a passion; there is an urgent need to save lives, and we are driven by the desire to save as many lives as we can,” he said.

    The high accident rate is becoming worrisome. Few weeks ago, on Ife-Ilesa road in Osun State, 10 people, including women and babies, died in an accident.

     

    Worrisome Statistics

    Worldwide, the number of people killed in crashes yearly is estimated at 1.2 million and injuries are the eighth leading cause of death among people aged 15-29.

    Despite 60 percent of its estimated 170 million population using road transportation, Nigeria lacks a reliable accident data.

    At a recent forum, experts canvassed for crashes to be pushed to the front burner of national discourse because they are becoming the leading cause of death.

    Founder and Director of Safety Beyond Borders (SBB), Adenusi Patrick said more than Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) and cancer, accidents are responsible for rising cases of deaths and permanent disabilities.

    There is also an economic perspective to crashes, as experts said crashes account for between one and three per cent loss to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) yearly.

    In its yearly Road Traffic Crashes (RTC) casualty data for December last year, the FRSC was upbeat about the marginal difference between 2013 and 2014.

    According to the data, 54 persons died in accidents in 2013, and 48 only in 2014, representing 11.1 per cent difference. Those injured within the same period dropped from 205 in 2013, to 166 in 2014, indicating 19 per cent difference.

    The figures for post-Ember months’ RTC between December 19, 2013 and January 13, 2014, and December 19, 2014 and January 12, 2015 for Lagos equally showed a marginal drop.

    FRSC said there were 41 crashes in 2013 and 37 in 2014, representing 9.7 per cent difference. Thirty-four persons were killed in 2013 and 16 in 2014 a 52.9 per cent difference.

    The injured were 137 in 2013 and 102 in 2014, indicating 25.5 per cent decrease. No fewer than 171 persons were involved in crashes in 2013 compared to 118 in 2014, showing a 30.9 per cent difference.

    What could be responsible for the reduction? Studies show that seat belts have reduced death risk by 61 per cent and chances of injury by 45 per cent. Wearing of helmets by motorcyclists has also reduced severity of head injury risk by 70 per cent; the campaign against drunk- driving is said to have lowered the risk of being injured by 40 per cent.

    FRSC’s sustained campaign against speed and drunk-driving, use of helmets, (in states where motorcyles are still permitted), seat belts and child restraints is believed to be responsible for reduction in crashes and deaths.

     

    Poor road infrastructure and over speeding

    Since Nigeria largely depends on road transportation, the pressure on federal, intercity and inner city roads and streets has been fingered for the bad state of the roads.

    Bamgbopa said despite all safety measures, 30 per cent of crashes is still traced to over-speeding.

    According to him, speeding increases the likelihood of a fatal crash.

    Wondering why drivers over-speed when the roads are bad and riddled with potholes, or when the roads lack traffic lights or reflectors and road signs, Bamgbopa said though vehicles were manufactured with a speedometer reading 0-200, responsible driving dictates that motorists must subject themselves to speed regulation.

     

    Speed limiter to the rescue

    Bamgbopa, the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of Sattrak Telematics Limited, which is championing the use of the speed limiter, describes the devise as a governor that will limit the top speed of a vehicle.

    This, according to him, could be either by controlling the fuel feed to the engine or by modifying the electronic signal from the electronic accelerator pedal or by disengaging the mechanical accelerator pedal.

    He said over 33 countries have speed limiter laws, adding that all of them have experienced significant reduction in crashes and casualties. According to him, in the United Kingdom, heavy duty vehicle accidents have dropped by 26 per cent since the limiter was introduced in 1992.

    He said if developed countries despite their strict traffic fine regime and avalanche of CCTVs could deploy speed limiter, that cuts down speed by reducing the fuel supply into any vehicle, Nigeria, must see the device as the best way out of fatal road crashes.

    Bamgbopa said the devise limits top speed despite driver’s urge or love for speeding.

     

    Benefits

    A limiter enhances safety of vehicle, owner, goods and other road users.

    It lowers fuel consumption from three to 11 percent, lower maintenance costs, (tyres, brakes engine) and reduce insurance premium.

    It equally improves the atmosphere by cutting down on the CO2 and Green House Gases (GHG) emissions because of the improved fuel consumption, as vehicles burn less fuel.

    Bamgbopa said over 100 motor vehicle models can be fitted with the speed limiter adding that all vehicles ranging from saloon to commercial buses, trucks, articulated vehicles and trailers can be fitted with the device.

    The device, he said, can be used on vehicles produced from year 2005 upwards which were fitted with electronic pedal system, while those up to 2004 with mechanical pedal system can have the devise fitted to their fuel supply and pedals.

    It will cost N35,000 to install the device on vehicles produced in 2005 upwards and N45,000 for vehicles produced from 2004 downwards.

    For vehicles with speed sensor, Bamgbopa said, the device would boost the sensor by regulating the fuel supply in a non-intrusive way that the vehicle would not jerk, but would cut down speed once the sensor’s regulated top speed is being crossed.

     

    Challenge to seamless implementation

    Stakeholders believe that motorists could compromise the limiter’s functions through tampering, removal of the device after fitting and resetting of the same by unscrupulous drivers.

    Also, lack of strict compliance by the regulator- the Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON), could also compromise its effectiveness, while ignorance by the rank and file of the FRSC could limit  its enforcement.

    Bamgbopa said the non-conformity to standards could affect the implementation across the states of the federation and the device’s effectiveness.

    While lauding the FRSC for coming up with the June 1 deadline for commercial drivers, Bamgbopa  said a more seamless implementation could be achieved by aligning the limiter’s installation to the yearly renewal of vehicle papers.

    “One would expect the Corps to partner with other agencies involved in vehicle particulars renewal at licensing offices across the country.

    “Another impediment that must be streamlined is the unavailability of uniformed speed limits and lack of adequate information on the devise by the enforcement personnel.”

    FRSC’s Lagos Sector Commander Hyginus Omeje said the limiter was adopted in the Corps efforts to reduce crashes in line with the United Nations Decade for Safe road campaign 2025.

    He said the implementation would begin with commercial buses, fleet operators and heavy duty vehicles on June 1.

    Shying away from the pricing row, Omeje said: “No amount can equate a life lost that could have been prevented. If people can afford the price of a luxury bus and have a fleet of those, why would they complain that a device that could save more lives and improve efficiency is expensive?”

    He said the device, which has been tested by the corps, could prevent accidents that can kill and destroy property, adding that this double loss can be avoided.

    Bamgbopa said prices would respond to market forces once enforcement begins. He admitted that the price may initially be high, but this, he said, is natural with new products. “Early buyers may likely pay more on the long run, but the prices would begin to respond to the market pull once more buyers begin to open up, buy and install in their vehicles,” Bamgbopa said.