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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In good road conditions it should take you no more than 80 yards (73m) to reduce your speed from 70mph to 30 mph. Most motorways are fairly straight and fairly level - there are few blind spots.
If you “come up behind someone” who is doing 40mph less than you on a motorway and you do not notice them well before they are 80 yards away, you need to consider whether your motorway driving technique is good enough to accommodate the vagaries of other road users. The overriding requirement is that you drive so that you can safely stop within the distance that you can see as being free of obstruction. No, I know few people do so, but that is the principle cause of many accidents.
But, back to the question, minimum speed limits only apply where the signs which have been mentioned are displayed. There is no blanket minimum speed limit in the UK.
I passed my test 30 years ago when I was 17, and have never seen a minimum speed limit sign. Apart from the Mersey Tunnel, are there any displayed elsewhere?
As for minimum speeds, I agree slow moving vehicles can be an enormous hazard; I recently came across a tractor on the A1 doing 20-ish mph on a dual carriageway where the speed limit is 70. This is a potential accident waiting to happen as cars slow down suddenly, and then pull out into the outside lane. Not all drivers are observant or even particularly competent, especially when looking ahead is concerned, and we need to make safety provision to accommodate the worst case not best case scenario.
(I would ban tractors from all roads, but that's another rant for another day!!)