Heavy vehicles

The Victorian freight task is predicted to increase from around 360 million tonnes in 2014 to nearly 900 million tonnes in 2051.

Heavy vehicles

While our freight plan Delivering the Goods contains a number of initiatives to encourage growth in rail freight, the road network will continue to play a dominant role in the freight task. 

Victoria relies more heavily on road transport because the Victorian freight landscape is so complex. The state’s exports are broadly scattered, resulting in a freight task comprising countless pick-up points and a variety of freight types.

To meet this challenge, Victoria maintains an intricate supply chain that connects with every farm gate and primary producer throughout the state.

The growth of larger vehicles that can carry more freight is essential in ensuring that the capacity of Victoria’s road network expands without exponentially increasing the number of heavy vehicles on our roads.

Delivering the Goods emphasises the importance of ongoing productivity improvements in the movement of freight.

The implementation of those improvements is contained in Moving More with Less 2021, Victoria’s high-productivity freight vehicle (HPFV) plan, detailing how Victoria will get the next generation of newer, cleaner, safer and more productive vehicles onto key freight corridors.

Victoria promotes broader access to the freight network by encouraging industry to adopt a suite of reference vehicle designs. Each design has access to a pre-approved network of HPFV routes. More reference vehicle designs and expanded networks are continually developed.

A reference design on a pre-approved network accelerates the permit process by providing automatic road-manager consent.

Download:

700km more for HPFVs

News story: Expanding our network

News story: Guiding the future of road freight 

 

Network and maps Superloads

Farmer and agricultural information Heavy vehicle industry

Over dimensional load rail permits