Skip to main content

Singapore to implement enforcement systems

Traffic police in Singapore are planning to implement an average speed enforcement system, to be trialled along the pan-island expressway and Changi coast road. The average speed enforcement system works by recording the time a vehicle takes to travel between two points to calculate its average speed, which the police say means that speeding motorists cannot evade the law even if they slow down before or speed up after the cameras. Speed detectors placed at the start and end points - to be determined in c
January 4, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Traffic police in Singapore are planning to implement an average speed enforcement system, to be trialled along the pan-island expressway and Changi coast road.

The average speed enforcement system works by recording the time a vehicle takes to travel between two points to calculate its average speed, which the police say means that speeding motorists cannot evade the law even if they slow down before or speed up after the cameras.   Speed detectors placed at the start and end points - to be determined in consultation with the 918 Land Transport Authority - will record the timestamp and vehicle licence plates. Speed limits in Singapore range from 40kmh on smaller roads to 90kmh on expressways.

In the last three years, the number of speeding violations in Singapore has risen; between January and November last year, the Traffic Police booked nearly 225,000 motorists for speeding, a daily average of 673 offences. In 2011, the figure for the whole year was 225,500, or 617 daily, compared to 205,000 cases in 2010.

In another development, the Traffic Police has called for a digital traffic red light system to be implemented under a separate tender issued in December 2012. At present, film is still used by the red-light camera systems in the island republic. The new system must be capable of capturing and storing digital images of motorists who go violate a red light. The images will be transferred to a backend computer system for use as evidence.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Traffic management to the fore at Vision 2014
    December 8, 2014
    Colin Sowman reviews some of the traffic-related exhibits at the 2014 Vision Show in Stuttgart. Traffic was a major theme at this years’ Vision Show in Stuttgart and several manufacturers used the exhibition to highlight their traffic-related equipment and applications.
  • Truvelo ranges widely in enforcement
    June 10, 2022
    Mobile and fixed-speed and red-light solutions will be on show at Traffex
  • Slovenian police get smart with truckers
    March 22, 2012
    Writing in the newsletter of TISPOL, an organisation established by the traffic police forces of Europe to improve road safety and law enforcement on the roads of Europe, Danijel Kumberger, National Traffic Police Unit, Slovenia, has revealed how smart the force has had to become to catch law-breaking truckers. As he points out, with automotive technical progress, it is vital to keep in touch with innovation because in modern vehicles, it is all about electronics, data sharing and processing of all kinds of
  • London Borough deploys CCTV-based HGV weight enforcement
    October 6, 2015
    The London Borough of Hillingdon is to enforce heavy goods vehicle (HGV) weight restrictions using the latest unattended digital CCTV-based hosted system from traffic enforcement and management solutions supplier Videalert. The unattended system is being delivered as a fully managed service and will enforce weight restriction contraventions which apply to HGVs exceeding 7.5 tonnes on designated roads.