A standard drink contains 10 grams of pure alcohol, but the drinks you buy often contain more than one standard drink. There are no common glass sizes used in Australia. The label on an alcoholic drink container tells you the number of standard drinks in the container.
The limit which applies to you is dependent on the category of your licence and the type of vehicle you are driving.
Zero applies to: ALL learner drivers. ALL Provisional 1 drivers. ALL Provisional 2 drivers. ALL visiting drivers holding an overseas or interstate learner, provisional or equivalent licence.
According to the 2007 National Drug Strategy Household Survey, more than 20% of 14-19 year olds consume alcohol on a weekly basis.
The last Australian School Students’ Alcohol and Drug Survey, conducted in 2005 found 10% of 12 year olds had consumed alcohol in the week prior to the survey, and by 17 this had increased to 49%. Amongst teenagers who drink weekly, 29% of males aged 12-17 had consumed seven or more drinks on one occasion; and 32% of females in the same age group had consumed five or more drinks on one occasion.
An estimated 2,643 young people aged between 15 and 24 years died from an alcohol-attributable injury and disease caused by risky or high risk drinking during 1993 and 2002.
• The most common causes for alcohol-attributable death for young people aged 15-24 years are road injury (males 52%, females 37%), suicide (males 19%, females 22%) and assault (males 7%, females 20%).