Skip to main content

The European Union Road Federation (ERF) calls for EU Member States to prioritise road maintenance

The European Union Road Federation (ERF) has put out an “urgent” call for “EU Member States to prioritise road maintenance” as neglected surfaces continue to deteriorate and the potholes grow larger and larger. ERF wants the EU to “put alternative financing mechanisms into place” as soon as possible, to tackle what it sees as a growing road safety crisis across the region.
August 12, 2014 Read time: 4 mins
The ERF is calling for road maintenance to be prioritised so as to address the growing pothole problem across Europe’s road network

The 2866 European Union Road Federation (ERF) has put out an “urgent” call for “EU Member States to prioritise road maintenance” as neglected surfaces continue to deteriorate and the potholes grow larger and larger. ERF wants the EU to “put alternative financing mechanisms into place” as soon as possible, to tackle what it sees as a growing road safety crisis across the region.

At its first ERF biennial Symposium on Road Infrastructure Challenges in June, more than 100 stakeholders heard the ERF demand the “opening (of) a dialogue between industry and road authorities to ensure a greater uptake of more innovative (funding) solutions.” The federation wants to see the member states exploit schemes that are “already available in the market.”

The symposium brought together a host of leading industry figures to debate key challenges facing the European road sector and also called for “the inclusion of minimum performance requirements on the TEN-T road network to ensure higher safety for users; the alignment of on-going initiatives in sustainability and road infrastructure to take benefit of the opportunities present in the new Directive for Public Procurement with respect to green and durable infrastructure; and the optimisation of the development of ITS solutions for road infrastructure with priority given the interaction between existing ADAS technologies (such as Lane Departure Warning Systems) and current core infrastructure elements.”

More money needs to be found, and quickly, was the message. “We are convinced that greater collaboration is needed between the private and public sectors to deal with the future road infrastructure challenges,” said Christophe Nicodème, ERF director general.

Speaking about the new European Road Initiative (ERI) “e-motion” campaign to “inspire action for better roads,” Siobhan McKelvey marketing director of Nynas Bitumen, told the symposium that “funding and investment in road infrastructure has always been a difficult challenge within decision-making and government priorities,” and that the EU is “now experiencing some of the lowest-ever levels of spending.”

“There is recognition from authorities and various stakeholders that investment is needed to avoid irreversible deterioration and preserve the asset,” McKelvey added, and “there is likely to be more focus on increasing road efficiency and productivity, hence an emphasis on maintenance, road/service performance and asset preservation.”

As a result, she is helping to spearhead the “e-motion” campaign which “aims to become the voice of the road user through social awareness campaigns and content promoting the role of roads across Europe.” Under the e-motion banner, a slew of new websites and social media feeds is being set up.

Already in place are: %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.roademotion.com Road Motion Website false http://www.roademotion.com/ false false%>,  %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.roademotion.co.uk Road Motion Website UK false http://www.roademotion.co.uk/ true false%>, %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.roademotion.fr Road Motion Website France false http://www.roademotion.fr/ false false%>, %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.roademotion.de Road Motion Website Germany false http://www.roademotion.de/ false false%>, %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.roademotion.be Road motiom false http://www.roademotion.be/ false false%>, %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.roademotion.es Road Motion Spain Website false http://www.roademotion.es/ false false%>, %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.facebook.com/roademotion Facebook Page for Road Motion false http://www.facebook.com/roademotion%20 false false%>as well as a twitter account called @road_emotion.
The campaign will lobby hard, just like the ERF, to create a “central forum to organise and react to conversations about roads.” Both groups want to see the “general public using social media as a platform to talk about roads, to form opinions, to organise debates, and to attempt to influence decision makers.”

Maria-Cristina Marolda, the policy officer in charge of research and innovative transport systems in the EC Directorate General for Mobility and Transport, told the delegates present that “European transport infrastructure is faced with multi-faceted challenges (capacity, environment, climate change, economy)” and that the “key will be to find innovative solutions to increase the performance, robustness and efficiency of infrastructure for all modes of transport.”

Use the EU’s PPI initiative she said. This system, called “The Public Procurement of Innovative Solutions” will allow, according to Marolda, the “public sector to act as launching customer for innovative products and services that are newly arriving on the market.”

It has put in place an environment where the “public sector can establish a buyers group with critical mass that triggers industry to scale up its production chain to bring products on the market with desired quality / price ratio within a specific time.” It also allows “innovation providers to compete Europe-wide for the supply of a scaled production of their innovative products/solutions and enter a wider market ... and to co-operate with other suppliers to provide a complete set of products to match more complex challenges.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Asphaltica exhibition and conference will provide asphalt road knowledge
    October 31, 2012
    The global economy is still suffering, and many believe investment in road and other infrastructure is the key to its revival Over the past 14 years in Italy, only 187km of new highways have been made, but, at the same time, the amount of vehicles using the country’s roads has grown by nearly 10 million. It is in this context of financial concern and growing burden on existing road infrastructure that the sixth edition of ASPHALTICA, the only European event exclusively dedicated to the world of asphalt, bit
  • ERF and RSMA team up to deliver 1st European Road Infrastructure Congress
    January 18, 2016
    Europe’s road infrastructure is one of its largest community assets, yet today this asset faces unprecedented challenges. Shortage of public resources for maintenance, inadequate public procurement models for the delivery of infrastructure, coupled with the inevitable impact that the advent of vehicle automation will have on Europe’s infrastructure means that there is a urgent need for Europe’s road sector to work together to find solutions for the future. In this backdrop, and at a time when the UK governm
  • Five things road construction crews should not do
    June 19, 2015
    Sometimes you need a sense of humour to complete a task. Sometimes that sense of humour can overstep the mark and not everyone will see the joke, as these five road construction site pictures show. Here are five things that construction crews should not do.
  • Paul Verrico of Eversheds will be headline speaker at ERIC 2016
    August 9, 2016
    Despite Europe being a global leader in road safety, around 25,000 road users (working, walking, driving or riding a bicycle) did not make it home in 2015 and more than 200,000 others sustained life-changing or serious injuries. Leading Safety Lawyer Paul Verrico, a Partner of European law firm Eversheds will present the ERICLeeds16 ROAD SAFETY DEBATE. He will argue that organisations in the UK face ever increasing sanctions through new sentencing guidelines for health and safety and corporate manslaugh