WA news LIVE: Perth freeways lead nation for dangerous driving in new study

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Perth freeways lead nation for dangerous driving

Perth’s two main arterial freeways are the worst in the nation for dangerous drivers, according to a new study.

The Kwinana Freeway and Mitchell Freeway came in first and second, respectively, on a top-10 list of dangerous roads, with hundreds of incidents bestowing them with a “dangerous driver score” of 75 and 64.

The study for law firm LHD Lawyers, which analysed more than 92,000 reported road crashes across six Australian states and territories in 2023, also saw WA’s Albany Highway round out the top-10 list with 368 incidents and a dangerous driver scores of 33.

The Kwinana Freeway has ranked among Australia’s most dangerous roads.Adobe Stock

There were 858 incidents recorded on the Kwinana Freeway and 753 on the Mitchell Freeway, with speed camera data scraped for the study also contributing to the roads’ high rankings.

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Across Australia and around the world

Here’s what is happening elsewhere today:

US President Donald Trump.AP
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Today’s weather

This week all eyes are on ex-tropical cyclone Narelle which is expected to re-intensify into a cyclone in the coming days in waters off the Kimberley.

For Perth, the week will start out mostly sunny and warm, but we’re expecting showers on Friday and over the weekend.

How much we get all depends on Narelle’s movements down the west coast. At this stage, a range of scenarios are possible.

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Welcome to our live news blog

Good morning readers, and welcome to our live news blog for Monday, March 23.

Making headlines today is a push from the nation’s peak mining body for the government to get on board with artificial intelligence to slash years of approval wait times.

The Minerals Council of Australia will ask for $13 million in the May federal budget to pilot AI, which it believes will provide a billion-dollar benefit to the economy in the long run by improving regulatory decision-making.

Tania Constable, Minerals Council of Australia chief executive, at the Financial Review Mining Summit 2025 in Perth.Photo Ross Swanborough

Around 26,000 homes across the country are caught in an approvals backlog, while the peak body for the nation’s miners estimates $51 billion in resources projects are stuck in the pipeline each year due to slow decision-making processes.

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: www.smh.com.au