Road Safety Blog

How can we sanitise our vehicles for driver safety?

As the country deals with the challenges presented by COVID-19, fleet drivers need to adapt many ways in which they operate to protect themselves from the virus. Fleet managers should be continuously updating their policies of what drivers need to do to prevent contracting coronavirus or unknowingly sharing the virus.

While a rigid policy of sanitising hands every time one enters or leaves a building is important, the managing director of MasterDrive , Eugene Herbert, explains why this alone is not effective enough. “If you were to sanitise your hands in the vehicle after an interaction with someone, by the time you do this, you could potentially have brought the virus into the car already.”

Consequently, one should follow these steps to ensure your vehicle remains sanitised:

Sanitising after a refuel:

Follow these tips regularly throughout the day. “If everyone does as much as they can to reduce the spread of COVID-19, we can reduce the impact it can have on businesses and many lives,” says Hebert.

Alcohol-based disinfectants will not damage the vehicle as long as you use it sparingly and do not soak the surfaces or use it on infotainment systems.

Sanitisers cannot set your vehicle alight. Spontaneous combustion can only happen in specific conditions.

Gel or liquid hand sanitisers need an external ignition source to catch alight. The heat of a vehicle alone is not enough to cause a fire.

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