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National Farmers' Federation

Improved quad bike safety on track as trans-Tasman Ministers take action towards a five-star safety rating system

The National Farmers’ Federation (NFF) has welcomed a commitment from Ministers to take decisive action towards the instatement of a five-star safety rating for quad bikes.
At a meeting in Melbourne last week, consumer affairs Ministers from across Australia and New Zealand agreed to “expedite the regulatory impact assessment processes needed to introduce the rating system and associated safety standards”.
NFF President Fiona Simson said quad bikes represented significant risk to farmers, farming families, farm workers and farm visitors.
“Quad bike incidents are the leading cause of accidental death on Australian farms.
“ Tragically, both adults and children are all too often killed or seriously injured from quad bikes.
“The NFF supports sensible measures to improve quad bike safety and to reduce the number of fatalities caused by the popular piece of farm equipment.”
During August, Tasmanian Coroner Simon Cooper called for legislative reforms to quad bike safety and for the development of “a star rating system” and New Zealand Coroner Brigitte Windley recommended the New Zealand Government should “set, implement and enforce” quad bike safety standards and consider “a national five-star safety rating system for quad bikes”.
Ms Simson said while a five-star safety system may be complex to develop, the NFF believed it would remind farmers that safety must be a key factor in their quad bike purchasing decisions.
“We want consumers to make informed choices and to be aware of the relative risk each vehicle poses.
“It would also provide manufacturers with a commercial reason to build safety into their product.”
Ms Simson congratulated the Ministers on their commitment and said it was now important to get the support of manufacturers.
“Until now, despite the self-evident merits of safety rating systems, there has been significant push back from quad bike manufacturers.
“In some instances, manufacturers are promoting specious ‘five star safe user guides’ which are designed to confuse the consumer into thinking safety is just a matter of behaviour rather than scientific evidence and design.”
Ms Simson said the NFF looked forward to continuing to work with governments and manufacturers to see a quad bike five-star safety rating become a reality.

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