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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsUniversity of Auckland Researchers Highlight Ute Risks in Groundbreaking Study
A recent working paper from the University of Auckland has ignited debate over the growing dominance of double-cab utes on New Zealand roads. Titled "Vehicle supersizing and risks to health and climate: Exploring the real-world use of double-cab utes in Aotearoa New Zealand," the study reveals that these popular vehicles are linked to significantly higher fatal accident rates and substantial burdens on the country's health system. Led by Professor Alistair Woodward and Dr. Kirsty Wild from the School of Population Health, along with colleagues Caroline Shaw, Robyn Gage, and Grant Lindsay, the research challenges the assumption that utes are primarily workhorses for rural areas.
The paper analyzes GPS data from over 10,000 NZ Transport Agency-tracked vehicles between 2021 and 2023, combined with national sales figures and crash statistics. It underscores how utes, despite their rugged image, are often deployed for short urban trips, exacerbating safety and environmental concerns in densely populated areas.
The Rise of Double-Cab Utes in New Zealand
Double-cab utes—pickup trucks with seating for five—have surged in popularity. In 2023, three of New Zealand's top five best-selling new vehicles were utes, reflecting a shift toward larger, heavier automobiles. This "vehicle supersizing" trend mirrors global patterns but hits NZ hard due to narrow urban streets and high diesel ute prevalence.
Sales data shows utes comprising a growing share of the fleet, fueled by marketing portraying them as versatile family and work vehicles. However, the study questions if their size and power are necessary for typical use, noting average trip lengths of just 12 kilometers—mostly within cities.
Real-World Usage: Urban More Than Rural
Contrary to their off-road marketing, GPS tracking reveals 47% of ute trips are work-related, compared to 23% for cars, but the majority are short urban journeys like shopping or drop-offs, often with single occupants. Two-thirds of trips occur in cities, where space is premium and pollution concentrates.
- Average trip distance: 12 km
- Urban trips: ~67%
- Work trips: 47% (but many short)
- Occupancy: Frequently solo driver
"Utes are not as much of a problem in rural areas, but they're not primarily being used in rural areas," Dr. Wild noted.
Safety Concerns: Seven Times the Fatal Risk
The study's most striking finding: Accidents involving utes are seven times more likely to be fatal than those with cars. Their height (striking at chest/head level) and flat fronts increase lethality for pedestrians and cyclists, often dragging victims underneath. NZTA crash data supports this, showing disproportionate severity.
In cities, where most ute trips happen, this poses acute risks to vulnerable road users like children. "Seven times more likely to kill you if they hit you, particularly dangerous to kids," Dr. Wild emphasized.
Burden on New Zealand's Health System
The safety and pollution impacts translate to heavy healthcare costs. Air pollution from diesel utes contributes seven times more social harm per kilometer than petrol cars, linked to 3,000 premature urban deaths yearly nationwide. In Auckland alone, traffic pollution causes 700 deaths and 6,100 childhood asthma cases annually.
"We have a particularly polluted and dangerous transport system... putting particular pressure on our healthcare resources," Dr. Wild said. Crash injuries from utes further strain hospitals, with higher severity leading to longer treatments and costs.
Emissions and Climate Footprint
Diesel dominance amplifies issues: Utes emit far more NO2 and particulates, worsening urban air quality. Short trips reduce efficiency, inflating per-km emissions. The study calls supersizing a barrier to NZ's climate goals, as larger vehicles undermine emissions reductions despite electrification pushes.
Fringe benefit tax exemptions for business utes may encourage urban adoption, per researchers.
Stakeholder Perspectives: Controversy Brews
While academics push reform, reactions echo past ute tax backlash. Farmers and tradies protested 2021's Clean Car Discount (dubbed "ute tax"), fearing costs for essential tools. Federated Farmers labeled similar FBT proposals "Ute Tax 2.0" in 2025, celebrating their scrapping. Government has scrapped prior fees, prioritizing affordability amid fuel hikes from global tensions.
Dr. Wild acknowledges rural needs but stresses urban misuse: "Someone has to pay that cost." Balance is key—policies targeting city use could mitigate opposition.
Policy Recommendations from the Study
Researchers propose targeted measures:
- Sales or registration taxes on large vehicles
- Congestion/parking charges scaled by size/emissions
- Restrictions on oversized parking spaces
- Advertising curbs, akin to tobacco
- Updated safety ratings factoring other-road-user risks
"Thinking about whether there [should be] higher charges for things like congestion charges," Dr. Wild suggested. Car-sharing for occasional needs could suffice.
International Lessons for New Zealand
Europe leads: Sales taxes on high-emission/large vehicles, strict pollution standards, and pedestrian-focused designs reduce supersizing. Norway's incentives favor smaller EVs; France limits SUV ads. NZ could adapt, updating vehicle standards post-coalition scrapping of prior fees.
Implications for NZ Society and Transport
Beyond health/climate, supersizing worsens congestion on narrow roads, shrinks footpaths, and raises infrastructure costs. Shift to efficient alternatives could save lives, cut emissions, ease healthcare—vital as NZ faces fuel volatility from global events.
University of Auckland's Contribution to Policy Debate
This study exemplifies NZ universities' role in evidence-based advocacy. The School of Population Health's interdisciplinary approach—merging transport, health, environment data—provides policymakers tools for safer, sustainable mobility. Explore opportunities in NZ higher ed at AcademicJobs NZ jobs.
As debate evolves, balancing essential use with urban realities will shape NZ's roads.

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