Skip to main content

Safety advice for poor weather driving

Winter driving advice is being provided by the Finnish Vaisala transport research group. According to Vaisala, the driver plays a particularly important role in safety with regard to winter conditions. Driving safely in the winter is not only about road maintenance services and the condition of the road. Driver behaviour, speed, and driving style as well as the condition of the vehicle and its tyres play an important role in ensuring a safe journey. For example, awareness of significantly longer stopping di
December 11, 2013 Read time: 4 mins
Winter driving advice is being provided by the Finnish 355 Vaisala transport research group. According to Vaisala, the driver plays a particularly important role in safety with regard to winter conditions. Driving safely in the winter is not only about road maintenance services and the condition of the road. Driver behaviour, speed, and driving style as well as the condition of the vehicle and its tyres play an important role in ensuring a safe journey. For example, awareness of significantly longer stopping distances is critical when driving under roadway ice warnings or in areas prone to black ice.   

Ice, snow, heavy rain and fog contribute to hazardous winter travel by reducing driver visibility and friction between a vehicle's tyres and the road surface. For example according to a 2364 US Department of Transportation study, adverse weather conditions and slippery roads account for an average of 1,511,200 crashes and 629,300 injuries/year. Slippery roads that reduce grip account for the majority of these statistics with rain and ice as leading factors. Wet pavement accounts for 81% of the injuries and 77% of the fatalities and icy pavement accounts for 10% of injuries and 10% of fatalities in the US.  In addition to loss of grip, rain, snow and fog can reduce visibility to nearly zero.

On a dry surface, a vehicle travelling at 60km/h has a braking distance of 18m. On a road surface with 0.15mm of hard ice, the braking distance at 60km/h increases to 71m, or almost three times the braking distance under normal conditions. Under hard ice conditions like this, the driver needs to reduce travel speed to 30km/h - or half of normal speed - to stop in the same distance as with a dry surface.

Recent developments in technology help transportation authorities identify when and where the roads are hazardous so safety precautions can be taken. Vaisala has remote sensors and weather stations used to measure road surface conditions in real time from the busiest city intersections to rural highways. For slippery road conditions, Vaisala's remote sensing technologies measure water, ice and snow level thicknesses on the road surface. This data is used to provide an assessment of friction for authorities to take appropriate action, such as switching on slippery road warning signs for drivers, trigger automatic de-icing sprays, or call for de-icing equipment to be dispatched. Other types of Vaisala remote sensors measure visibility in real time to issue low visibility warnings due to rain, snow, and fog.  

These remote sensors for road surface conditions and visibility can be combined with traffic cameras, weather stations, thermal mapping, forecasting services, decision support systems and mobile communications for a high tech solution to improve road safety. Intelligent traffic systems can automatically issue roadside and broadcast warnings, dispatch crews to problem areas, and forecast hazardous conditions for transportation authorities to Plan ahead and pre-stage equipment to improve road conditions, potentially saving lives.

Transportation authorities are adopting new technology to measure, identify, and predict hazardous road conditions that can, in many cases, be reduced with treatment such as de-icing sprays or salt applications. However the driver's behaviour before and during winter road hazards plays a critical role. For example slippery roads due to wet pavement and ice have deadly consequences due to loss of friction between the tyre and the road. Drivers are responsible for ensuring that their tyres are maintained according to the manufacturer's recommendation. Even when tyres are properly inflated, rotated and replaced as recommended, drivers should also heed roadside and broadcast warnings and adjust their speed, distances between vehicles, acceleration and deceleration accordingly in order to maximise safety under winter conditions.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Plantworx 2013 focus on latest safety technology for worksite vehicles
    November 28, 2012
    Plantworx 2013 will showcase the latest worksite vehicle safety systems. GKD Technik’s (GKD) Incline Alert system will be among those featured at the UK’s largest construction show, spanning 100,000m², being held at Stoneleigh Park, Coventry Warwickshire on 16 May, 2013. The system is said by GKD to have been developed to meet a need for incline monitoring in the construction and utility maintenance industries, particularly for smaller excavators, which carry a higher risk of overturning when operating on i
  • TISPOL Conference: autonomous vehicles high on safety agenda
    February 2, 2017
    Safety and autonomous vehicles exercised the minds of some of Europe’s senior police officers at the recent TISPOL European Traffic Police Network Conference in the UK. The European Union looks like missing its target of halving the number of people killed on its roads each year by 2020. Just when European police forces are trying to get back on target, along comes the autonomous vehicle with all its inherent safety issues.
  • Safer Roads by Design comes to Costa Rica
    November 14, 2012
    IRF’s itinerant cycle of training seminars aimed at helping countries eliminate needless deaths and meet their commitments to the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety made a notable stop in San Jose, Costa Rica on September 12-14. Safer Roads by Design - Costa Rica was hosted by the National Laboratory of Materials and Structural Models of the University of Costa Rica (Lanamme UCR), the country’s leading knowledge centre on road engineering, with additional support from the Inter-American Development Bank an
  • ERF Position Paper calls for more road markings to boost road safety
    December 13, 2013
    The European Union Road Federation (ERF) has today launched a Position Paper that makes the case for a more widespread use of road markings on Europe’s roads as a means of increasing road safety and reducing the socio-economic impact of accidents. Entitled ‘Marking the way towards a safer future’, the ERF is calling on EU Member States to establish intervention and maintenance policies to guarantee that road markings on Europe’s road remain visible for road users and, at same time, optimise the interaction