Skip advert
Advertisement

Government urged to introduce alcolocks for cars

Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety says drivers should have to give a negative alcohol reading before being able to drive

Alcohol interlock system

The Government has been urged to introduce alcolocks - which prevents a car from being started until the driver has blown into a breath-testing instrument to show they’re sober - as soon as possible.

A report by the Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety (PACTS), which received contributions from expert groups such as IAM Roadsmart, says alcolocks would have a positive impact on road safety in the UK.

There have been around 240 deaths per year involving a drink-driver in Great Britain since 2010, with no recent progress having been made in reducing this number. An IAM Roadsmart survey of 2,000 drivers showed 90 per cent of respondents supported the idea of all new cars being fitted with alcolocks.

Advertisement - Article continues below

All new cars sold in Europe will have to be alcolock-enabled from next year, but the UK Government has to make a decision on how this technology will be used. IAM Roadsmart has previously suggested alcolocks could be useful in reforming motorists who have previously committed drink-driving offences.

Further previous research by the road safety organisation showed the personal financial cost of being found guilty of drink-driving is as much as £70,000 when legal fees, higher car insurance premiums, alternative transport costs and potential loss of earnings are taken into account.

Neil Greig, director of policy and research at IAM RoadSmart, said: “Worldwide, integrating technology, such as alcolocks, with rehabilitation courses, has been shown to be the most effective way to stop drink drive reoffending and reduce crashes.

“The evidence is clear. Nearly all motorists want new cars fitted with alcolocks to help stop the daily carnage on UK roads from drink-driving and this latest PACTS report is even further endorsement. In the meantime, our message is clear - it must always be ‘None for the Road’.”

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

New Land Rover Defender Sport: baby SUV hedges bets with EV and hybrid power
New baby Land Rover Defender render - watermarked

New Land Rover Defender Sport: baby SUV hedges bets with EV and hybrid power

The new Land Rover Defender Sport will sit below the existing Defender in both size and price, and our exclusive image previews how it could look
News
17 Jun 2026
New Honda Super-N 2026 review: little EV is fun and full of character
Honda Super-N and Richard Ingram

New Honda Super-N 2026 review: little EV is fun and full of character

Honda's quirky Super-N is compromised on paper, but in reality it's a fun and efficient small EV
Road tests
19 Jun 2026
New BMW i3 on sale now: electric 3 Series finally ready to take on Tesla Model 3
BMW i3 50 xDrive - front 3/4

New BMW i3 on sale now: electric 3 Series finally ready to take on Tesla Model 3

Are you watching Tesla, Polestar, Audi and Mercedes? The new BMW i3 is here setting new standards with its huge 563-mile range
News
18 Jun 2026

Find a car with the experts