Road safety charity Brake is calling for a greater sense of urgency among the authorities in tackling the issue of drink-driving across the UK.
These calls follow the publication of the latest road casualty statistics for 2015 from the Department for Transport, which showed the number of deaths in accidents where alcohol was a contributing factor accounted for 13 per cent of all fatalities.
Overall, this was a figure unchanged from the previous year and broadly in line with the records since the start of the decade. As such, Brake claimed there is a growing trend of lacklustre improvement
in this area.
Lucy Amos, research adviser at Brake, commented: "The statistics released today reveal a worrying level of stagnation in the number of people killed because of drink-driving, with the numbers remaining unchanged since the previous year."
She added that the organisation is therefore now calling for the introduction of a zero-tolerance approach to alcohol for all motorists across the UK, as well as greater prioritisation and resources for traffic policing and the reintroduction of casualty reduction targets.