New Report from Volvo Trucks: Fatigue and Inattentiveness behind Most Accidents
www.chinatrucks.com: Nine out of ten accidents involving trucks are a result of the human factor. This was revealed in a fresh report on traffic safety and road accidents in Europe produced by Volvo Trucks.
The report was produced by the Accident Research Team at Volvo Trucks and is based on its own investigations of accidents as well as data obtained from various national and European authorities. It describes why accidents with trucks occur, their sequence and what can be done to reduce the risk of accidents and their consequences.

Carl Johan Almqvist, Traffic and Product Safety Director at Volvo Trucks
“90 percent of all truck accidents stem entirely or partly from the human factor, for instance when one or more of the drivers of the involved vehicles are distracted or misjudge their speed,” says Carl Johan Almqvist, Traffic and Product Safety Director at Volvo Trucks.
The report also reveals that drinking and driving is not one of the major causes of road accidents involving truck drivers. Only 0.5 percent of truck drivers involved in serious accidents were under the influence of alcohol. The corresponding figure for accidents involving passenger cars varies between 15 and 20 percent.

Volvo FH Driving Room
Heavy trucks are involved in 17 percent of all fatal accidents and seven percent of accidents resulting in personal injuries. The majority of accidents resulting in truck driver injuries are single-vehicle incidents in which the truck drives off the road. More than half of all serious accidents with trucks consist of collisions between cars and trucks.
“Access to facts about accidents is immensely valuable for our ongoing safety work, helping us make the right priorities in our product development. For instance, we have further enhanced safety levels in our latest truck models with a range of support systems that improve visibility, alert the driver or focus the driver’s attention if something is not right,” explains Carl Johan Almqvist.
Have a look on youku how Volvo Trucks’ new active safety system Collision Warning with Emergency Brake can avoid a rear end collision: https://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNTA4MDM1MTk2.html
Thanks to safer vehicles, improved infrastructure and safer behaviour on the road, the number of fatal accidents on European roads has dropped continuously since the early 1990s. But far more lives would be able to be saved if more people used their seat belts, something that not even half of the truck drivers on European roads do. Only five percent of the truck drivers who died in road accidents were wearing seat belts.
“As long as people are injured in road accidents, we will continue to pursue higher safety levels. Firstly by making our trucks safer for drivers and other road users, and secondly by spreading knowhow and by impacting patterns of behaviour and persuading more people to use the seat belt.”

Volvo Trucks’ Accident Research Team
Facts about Volvo Trucks’ Accident Research Team (ART)
ART has investigated and analysed traffic accidents involving trucks since 1969. For more than 40 years, ART’s experience and expertise have formed the cornerstone of Volvo Trucks’ work on continuously improving trucks’ accident- and injury-prevention properties, making Volvo trucks among the safest on the market.
Views:0
Submit Your Requirements, We Are Always At Your Service.
- Volvo Group and Daimler Truck launch Coretura Joint Venture 2025-06-19
- Volvo reaches milestone with 5,000 electric trucks sold worldwide 2025-05-06
- Volvo Gets Order for 1,500 Volvo FH Aero Trucks from an Italian Logistics Compan 2024-07-23
- Volvo Trucks Will Be at the IAA Transportation 2024 Expo 2024-07-15
- Volvo Expands Its Range of Biodiesel-powered Trucks 2024-05-28
- Volvo and Daimler Truck to Form Software Joint Venture 2024-05-23
- World's First: Volvo Built Electric Trucks with Fossil-Free Steel 2022-11-11
- Volvo to Supply 20 Heavy-duty Electric Trucks to Amazon 2022-10-10
- Volvo Trucks Starts Series Production of Heavy Electric Trucks 2022-09-15
- Volvo Trucks Launches FH with I-Save in China 2022-04-29
- Foton, COSCO Shipping Move to Secure Capacity as China’s CV Exports Rise
- The 11th DISCOVERY TRUST Awards Successfully Held in Beijing, China
- Chinese Heavy Truck Makers Shift to Value-Driven Global Expansion
- Shandong Heavy Industry and Kazakhstan’s Karaganda Region Ink New Deal
- China’s Diesel Trucks are Shifting to Electric
- Indonesia’s State-led Firm Set to Purchase 320,000 Vehicles
- SANY Truck and Pony.ai to Mass-Produce Gen-4 Autonomous Trucks in 2026
- FOTON Boosts Local Manufacturing in South Africa
- Office Closure for National Day Holiday
- FORLAND Rolls Out Its 6.8 Millionth Vehicle
- China Heavy Truck Sales Fall to 73,600 Units in February
- China’s Medium-Duty Truck Sales Fall to 8,125 Units in February, 2026
- China’s February Light Truck Sales Fall 23% to 117,200 Units
- China’s Mini Truck Sales Rise 15% in February to 41,500 Units
- China’s Light Truck Market Rises 8% in January 2026 to 323,500 units
- China’s Pickup Sales Reach Five-Year January High as Market Momentum Builds
- Heavy Truck Sales Soar 46% to 105,400 Units in January 2026
- January Medium Truck Sales Hit 14,100, Up 33%
- China’s Truck Exports Top 1 Million Units for the First Time in 2025
- China Tractor Truck Sales Up 54% in Dec., 2025 Full-Year Sales 460,000 Units

