- Keep cool and stay alert: Studies suggest that ambient temperatures above 22°C could cause drowsiness and dull drivers’ alertness1, but nearly half (49 percent) of European drivers do not turn on the air conditioning until the temperature has hit 28°C. One study has shown that at 27°C degrees driver reaction times are 22 percent slower than at 21°C2. So setting the car’s air conditioning to a comfortable and safe 21-22°C helps keep drivers cool, alert and responsive.
- Clear the air: Although nearly half of European drivers (48 percent) do not know it, car air conditioning systems remove up to 88% of the pollen and other allergens in the outside air3. So turn on the air conditioning to help keep drivers sneeze- and headache-free.
- See clearly: When driving at higher altitudes or in mountains, the outside temperature can rapidly drop, causing condensation to build up on the windscreen and impairing visibility. Although one in five (20 percent) European drivers is not aware, turning on the air conditioning quickly and effectively removes moisture and condensation from the windscreen, allowing drivers to maintain optimum visibility of the road.
- Take a break: While it is tempting to keep driving for long stretches in order to reach your destination more quickly, driver fatigue is a major risk factor, causing as many as one in every three road accidents. In addition to keeping the cabin temperature below 22°C to increase alertness, remember to take at least a five-minute break for every two hours of driving. If you feel tiredness is taking you over, then pull over and rest up for at least 15 to 20 minutes.
- Stretch your legs and arms and back: When you take a break, find a safe place to park your car and step outside to stretch completely. This helps maintain alertness and wards off fatigue.
- Limit your speed: Driving at higher speeds requires greater concentration and causes drivers to tire more easily. Speeding is also a major cause of accidents. Limiting your speed is not only good for you, it’s good for the environment, too. Speeding does not pay off – not only is it illegal, it does not save that much time: on a distance of 120km, driving at 150kmh instead of 120kmh saves a little over 10 minutes.
- Stick to the rules: Knowing and respecting the rules of the road is a key factor in ensuring road Many Europeans will be crossing national borders on their long holiday drives this summer. It is important that you are completely familiar with the rules of the road in the countries in which you are driving. They may be different from those at home.
- Be equipped: In the unfortunate event of a roadside breakdown, it is important to remain highly visible to other drivers, so ensure you are equipped with a safety kit before you set out – in many cases it’s the law!
- Do not use your phone: If you must make a call when driving, use a hands-free set. If you do not have one, pull over when it is safe to do so to make that call. And never text and drive!
- And never, ever, drink and drive: It may go without saying, but it bears repeating – even if some countries allow a minimum blood-alcohol level, play it safe and never, ever, drink and drive.
- More than one in three European drivers (35 percent) does not know that using the air conditioning can prevent drowsiness. That figure climbs to more than four in 10 drivers in Germany (44 percent) and over half of all drivers in France (51 percent).
- When they do use the air conditioning, half of all European drivers do not put it on until the ambient temperature has hit 28°C – when it is already far too hot according to studies. Those studies suggest that task performance is optimal at 21-22°C and decreases at 23°C and above4, and that at 27°C driver reaction times are 22 percent slower than at 21°C.5
- One in five European drivers (20 percent) is not aware that the air conditioning helps remove moisture from the windshield, a critical safety feature of air conditioning. French and U.K. drivers are the most sceptical, with almost quarter not believing air conditioning can remove windscreen moisture (24 percent and 23 percent respectively).
- Nearly half of European drivers (48 percent) were unaware that using the air conditioning reduces exposure to pollen, other airborne allergens and ambient pollution. In fact more than half of European drivers (53 percent) erroneously think that air conditioners re-circulate germs and pollutants in the car.
- Nearly one in five Europeans (19 percent) say they prefer to drive with the window open in slow-moving traffic and when driving off motorways. But a 2010 study shows that car air conditioning can reduce the total number of microorganisms by 81.7 percent, the number of mold spores by 83.3 percent, and the number of particles by 87.8 percent.
- Air conditioning remains the favourite optional extra for European drivers: More than half (54 percent) said they would be willing to pay for it if it were not included. This is significantly more than those who said they would pay for a navigation system (38 percent), parking assistance (36 percent) or parking cameras (31 percent).
- European Union’s Mobile Air conditioning Directive is phasing out the previous refrigerant used in car air conditioning systems that has a greenhouse effect 1,300 more powerful than CO2. When asked by how much a new replacement refrigerant – Honeywell’s Solstice® yf – cut the air conditioning’s global warming potential, only 2 percent of respondents correctly estimated that the reduction on the old refrigerant is of 99.9 percent.
- Today there are over 5 million cars on the road using Solstice yf, reducing CO2 emissions by roughly 3 million tonnes or the equivalent of carbon sequestered by 10 thousand square kilometres of trees, nearly six times the size of London.
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