Thanks for this, Anto.
At first blush, the info suggests that cyclists should be careful on Sundays, and especially, steer clear of Dublin.
As Paul says, though, the data serve to point up points to be explored, such as the reasons for the different numbers of fatalities on roads with different speed limits. The results of collisions at 30, 50, and 80 km/h, for example, are usually quite different, with the higher speeds causing more serious injuries and more deaths.
The matter of usage by cyclists--numbers, daily patterns, and distances--is important, but also motorists' patterns of use, particularly the
type of vehicles on the roads. SUVs are especially destructive in collisions with pedestrians, for example, less because of their weight than their front-end geometry--see this article:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2563506/ I find that "collisions" and "crashes" are more useful words than "accidents" -- whether a collision is an accident, or (say) the result of negligence, is surely a matter of analysis, not description. (It's interesting that in recent years, the media here in Ottawa now speak of "collisions", not "accidents": A few years ago, on a Sunday morning [!!], the driver of a van crashed into several cyclists who were riding in a well-marked cycling lane on an arterial road, causing death and serious injury. At first, news reports spoke of an "accident". The lawyer for the cyclists challenged the use of the word, asserting that the collision was far from accidental.)
In any case, safe journeys, all -- enjoy the early summer sunshine