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TT-014 Open road · Gironde, France 2015

Puisseguin coach crash — A Truck Crossed the Line and the Fire Did the Rest

Killed
43
Vehicle
Coach (and a logging truck)
Setting
Open road
Status
Multi-factor

Summary

On 23 October 2015, at about 7:30 in the morning, a coach carrying elderly day-trippers and a logging truck collided head-on on a tight right-hand bend of departmental road RD17, just south of Puisseguin in the Gironde, south-western France. A flash fire engulfed both vehicles within seconds. Forty-three people died: 41 of the coach's passengers — most of them pensioners from the surrounding villages, setting out on an autumn outing — and two people in the truck, one of them a three-year-old child travelling with the driver. Eight more were injured. It was the deadliest road crash in France since 1982.

The mechanism of the collision was a loss of control. The BEA-TT, France's land-transport accident investigation bureau, found that the truck — a timber lorry approaching the curve — lost control as it entered the bend, drifted across the centre line into the oncoming lane, and struck the coach. That much was an ordinary, if catastrophic, road collision. What turned it into a mass-casualty fire was a chain of secondary failures. The truck carried a large auxiliary fuel tank, fitted in a manner that did not comply with the regulations; in the impact it ruptured, and fuel flowed down the sloping road beneath the coach, where it ignited. The fire ran back to the truck and engulfed both vehicles.

Most of the coach passengers did not die from the impact; they died because they could not get out in time. The BEA-TT found that the coach's interior materials offered inadequate fire resistance and produced toxic smoke as they burned, that passengers struggled to operate the smoke-evacuation devices and to reach the exits, and that the interior lighting failed after the collision, leaving the cabin dark as it filled with black smoke. The fire developed so fast that the survivable margin was measured in seconds.

The BEA-TT published its final report on 8 August 2017. Its conclusion was multi-factor: the direct cause was the truck's loss of control and crossing into the opposing lane, but the death toll was the product of the non-compliant fuel-tank installation, the flammability and toxicity of the coach's interior, and the difficulty of evacuating it. The criminal process that followed produced no trial. After an initial dismissal (non-lieu) in 2021, the investigation was reopened in 2023, but in 2025 the Bordeaux court of appeal confirmed the dismissal: the magistrates found no element strong enough to send any of the companies involved to trial, leaving the bereaved families without the courtroom reckoning they had sought for a decade.

Timeline

23 Oct 2015, early morning
An outing sets off
A coach collects a group of mostly elderly residents from villages around Petit-Palais-et-Cornemps and the surrounding area for an autumn day trip; 49 passengers and the driver are aboard.
23 Oct 2015, ~7:30 a.m.
The bend on the RD17
South of Puisseguin, a laden logging truck approaches a tight right-hand curve on the departmental road RD17 from the opposite direction.
23 Oct 2015, ~7:30 a.m.
Loss of control
The truck loses control entering the bend, drifts across the centre line into the oncoming lane, and collides head-on with the coach.
Seconds later
The tank ruptures
The truck's non-compliant auxiliary fuel tank splits in the impact; fuel runs down the sloping road beneath the coach and ignites, and the fire spreads back to the truck.
Within minutes
Both vehicles ablaze
A flash fire engulfs the coach and the truck; the coach cabin fills with toxic black smoke as interior materials burn and the lighting fails.
23 Oct 2015
The toll
Forty-three die — 41 coach passengers and 2 in the truck, including a three-year-old child; 8 are injured. Eight coach occupants escape.
23–24 Oct 2015
National mourning
France declares a day of national mourning; it is the country's deadliest road crash since 1982.
8 Aug 2017
The BEA-TT report
The bureau publishes its final report: direct cause the truck's loss of control and crossing into the opposing lane; contributing factors the non-compliant fuel tank, the coach's interior flammability and smoke toxicity, and the difficulty of evacuation.
2021
Dismissal
An investigating magistrate issues a non-lieu (dismissal), finding insufficient grounds to charge; the civil parties and prosecutor appeal.
Mar 2023
Reopened
The Bordeaux court of appeal reopens the investigation, with indictments touching the companies that owned the two vehicles.
19 Jun 2025
Dismissal confirmed
The Bordeaux court of appeal confirms the total dismissal; no party is sent to trial, and the civil parties denounce the outcome as unacceptable.

A Bend, a Coach, and a Logging Truck

The RD17 winds through the vineyards and woodland south of Puisseguin, and at one point it bends sharply to the right for traffic heading one way — and to the left for the other. On the morning of 23 October 2015 a coach carrying 49 passengers and its driver was on that road. The passengers were, in the main, elderly residents of the local villages, neighbours setting out together on a day trip; aboard the truck was a three-year-old child travelling with the driver.

Approaching the same bend from the opposite direction was a logging truck, a heavy timber lorry of the kind that works the forests of the region. As it entered the curve, it lost control. The BEA-TT identified this loss of control, on the approach to and entry of the bend, as the direct cause of the collision. The truck drifted across the centre line into the lane of oncoming traffic and met the coach head-on.

A head-on collision between a coach and a heavy truck is, by itself, a severe event. But the impact alone did not account for the scale of the death toll: the collision forces were survivable for many of those aboard the coach. What followed is what killed them.

Fuel on a Slope, and Forty Seconds of Smoke

The truck carried a large auxiliary fuel tank — additional capacity for the diesel and chainsaw fuel that a working logging vehicle needs. The BEA-TT found that this tank had been fitted in a way that did not comply with the regulations governing such installations. In the head-on impact it ruptured, releasing its fuel. The road at that point sloped, and the spilled fuel ran downhill, beneath the coach. There it found ignition, and a flash fire erupted, sweeping the underside of the coach and running back to engulf the truck.

Inside the coach, the situation became unsurvivable with terrible speed. The bureau found that the interior materials did not offer adequate resistance to fire and, as they burned, gave off toxic smoke. The cabin filled with dense black smoke. The passengers struggled to operate the devices meant to clear smoke from the vehicle, and they struggled to reach the exits and the emergency exits. The interior lighting failed after the collision, so that the people trying to escape did so in darkness, in smoke, in a vehicle that was already burning beneath them. Eight occupants of the coach managed to get out. Forty-one did not.

The distinction the report draws is the heart of the case. The collision was a loss-of-control event of a familiar kind. The catastrophe was built from secondary failures that each, on their own, would have been a regulatory footnote: a fuel tank fitted out of compliance, cabin materials that burned and smoked, evacuation systems that the very people who needed them could not work in the seconds available. Together, on a sloping road in the early morning, they converted a survivable crash into the worst road disaster France had seen in over three decades.

The Bureau's Finding and a Decade Without a Trial

The BEA-TT — the bureau created in the wake of the Mont Blanc Tunnel fire to investigate land-transport accidents independently — published its final report on the Puisseguin crash on 8 August 2017. Its analysis was deliberately layered. The direct cause was stated plainly: the loss of control of the truck combination as it approached and entered the curve, causing it to cross into the opposing lane. But the report's substance lay in its contributing factors, the elements that explained why 43 people died rather than a handful. It named the non-compliant installation of the truck's additional fuel tank, the inadequate fire resistance of the coach's interior materials and the toxicity of their smoke, the difficulty passengers had operating the smoke-evacuation devices and reaching the exits, and the absence of interior lighting after the collision. The bureau issued recommendations directed at fuel-tank compliance, coach interior fire safety, and evacuation provisions.

A safety board's finding and a court's verdict are different instruments, and in this case they diverged sharply. The criminal investigation, conducted by an investigating magistrate rather than the BEA-TT, struggled to fix legal responsibility. In 2021 the magistrate issued a non-lieu — a dismissal, finding insufficient grounds to send anyone to trial. The civil parties, the families of the dead, and the public prosecutor appealed. In March 2023 the Bordeaux court of appeal reopened the investigation, and indictments were brought touching the companies that owned the coach and the truck. But the reopening did not deliver a trial. On 19 June 2025 the same court of appeal confirmed the dismissal in full: the magistrates concluded that no element was strong enough to send any of the parties before a criminal court. A decade after 43 people died, there had been no trial, and the families called the outcome shameful. The BEA-TT's diagnosis of what failed stands as the most authoritative account of the disaster; the courts declined to translate it into criminal liability.

The Five Factors

01
Loss of control on a curve crosses the line that kills
The direct cause was the truck losing control entering the bend and drifting into the oncoming lane. On undivided two-way roads, a vehicle that crosses the centre line meets oncoming traffic at combined speed; road geometry, vehicle handling, and any margin of separation on tight bends are the difference between a corrected wobble and a head-on.
02
A non-compliant fuel tank is a bomb waiting for an impact
The truck's auxiliary fuel tank, fitted out of compliance, ruptured on impact and supplied the fire. Fuel-system integrity and the compliance of tank installations are not paperwork; a tank that splits in a survivable collision turns a crash into a conflagration. Where extra tanks are fitted, their mounting and rupture resistance must meet the standard.
03
A coach interior must not be the fuel for its own fire
The cabin's materials burned readily and produced toxic smoke, and most deaths were from the fire and smoke, not the impact. Interior flammability and smoke-toxicity standards for passenger vehicles directly determine how many seconds occupants have to escape; combustible furnishings shorten an already brief window.
04
Evacuation must work in the dark, in smoke, by frightened people
Passengers could not operate the smoke-evacuation devices, struggled to reach exits, and had no interior lighting after the crash. Emergency systems that demand calm, clear sight, and dexterity fail exactly when they are needed; egress must be operable in darkness and smoke, by ordinary and in this case elderly occupants, in seconds.
05
A survivable collision plus secondary failures equals a massacre
No single factor here was unprecedented; their combination was. The lesson is systemic: post-crash survivability depends on fuel containment, interior fire behaviour, and egress acting together. Designing only against the impact, while neglecting the fire and the evacuation, leaves the deadliest phase of the event unaddressed.

Aftermath

The Puisseguin crash struck a small rural community with concentrated force — most of the dead were neighbours from the same cluster of villages, lost on a single morning. France declared a national day of mourning. For the bereaved, the years that followed brought the BEA-TT's detailed technical account but no criminal accountability: the dismissal of 2021, the brief reopening of 2023, and the appeal court's confirmation of the dismissal in June 2025 closed the legal avenue without a trial. The civil parties described the outcome as unacceptable, a denial of the courtroom examination they had sought for ten years.

The lasting consequence of the case lies in the safety domain rather than the criminal one. The BEA-TT's findings on fuel-tank compliance, coach interior fire safety, and evacuation fed into the wider European conversation about post-crash survivability in buses and coaches — the recognition that a vehicle's behaviour in the seconds after a collision, when fuel can ignite and a cabin can fill with smoke, is as decisive as its crash resistance. The crash remains a reference case for the principle that fire and evacuation, not impact alone, often decide how many people walk away.

Lessons

  1. Treat fuel-tank installations — especially large auxiliary tanks on working vehicles — as safety-critical; verify their compliance and rupture resistance, because a tank that splits on impact supplies the fire that kills.
  2. Hold passenger-vehicle interiors to strict flammability and smoke-toxicity standards; the materials lining a coach determine how many seconds its occupants have to escape a fire.
  3. Design coach evacuation to work in the worst conditions — darkness, smoke, panic, elderly or infirm passengers — and ensure smoke-evacuation devices and emergency exits can actually be operated by the people aboard.
  4. Maintain interior lighting that survives a collision; occupants cannot find an exit they cannot see in a cabin filling with black smoke.
  5. Engineer and regulate for post-crash survivability, not impact alone; the deadliest phase of a road disaster is often the fire and the failed evacuation that follow a survivable collision.

References