Skip to main content

The IRF joined global transport leaders at the ITF 2025 Summit

The ITF Summit 2025 was an important event for transport policy, with IRF playing a key role.
By IRF July 21, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
RF acting director general, Gonzalo Alcaraz, met with ITF secretary-general Young Tae Kim on the final day of this year’s Summit to advance the collaboration

From 21 to 23 May 2025, more than 1,200 delegates from more than 80 countries gathered in Leipzig for the annual International Transport Forum (ITF) Summit, the world’s foremost platform for high-level discussions on transport policy. As in previous years, the International Road Federation (IRF) took an active part, contributing to critical exchanges on the resilience of global transport systems. 

Building on the letter of intent signed with the ITF at the 2024 Summit, IRF acting director general, Gonzalo Alcaraz, met with ITF secretary-general Young Tae Kim on the final day of this year’s Summit to advance the collaboration. Discussions focused on the development of a forthcoming memorandum of understanding, which will frame joint efforts including capacity-building programmes, technical cooperation, and data-driven initiatives aimed at strengthening road transport systems worldwide. 

On Wednesday 21 morning, the IRF co-organised its first side event during the Summit, “Transport System Resilience, Connectivity and Diversification in the Face of Climate Change and Other Global Shocks”, alongside Japan’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, Life-Links, Kuehne Climate Center, Oris Materials Intelligence and the Asian Transport Observatory. Opening remarks from Alcaraz underlined that road networks face ever-greater threats from extreme weather, shifting climate patterns and geopolitical unrest. 

That afternoon, the IRF convened a second session on “Effective Qualifications-Based and Gender-Responsive Procurement as a Tool to Enhance the Resilience of Transport Systems”, in collaboration with the Union for the Mediterranean and the International Federation of Consulting Engineers (FIDIC). Delegates examined how low- and middle-income countries, despite securing nearly one third of all climate finance, still grapple with an investment gap in transport infrastructure. Alcaraz said that qualifications-based selection ensures that technical expertise, innovation and value for money prevail over short-term cost-cutting.

The discussions in Leipzig provided a valuable platform to share practical approaches to infrastructure adaptation, digital transformation and fair procurement, issues that remain central as we move towards COP30 in Brazil.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • On the road to the IRF Istanbul Congress, first stop: decarbonisation
    May 30, 2024

    As the world gears up for the highly anticipated IRF World Congress 2024 to be hosted in Istanbul on 15-18 October 2024, work on some of the core themes of the Congress is moving on steadily.

    Under the overarching theme of “Connecting to Empower Mobility: Roads as Enablers of a Sustainable Future for All”, the Congress serves as a dynamic platform to explore innovative solutions and collaborative efforts.

  • José Viegas starts work as ITF secretary-general
    August 20, 2012
    Internationally renowned academic José Viegas of Portugal has begun work as the new chief executive of International Transport Forum (ITF), the global transport policy body. The ITF is an intergovernmental organisation with 54 member countries that acts as a strategic think tank for global transport policy and organises an annual summit of transport ministers.
  • Registration open for International Transport Forum’s 2014 Summit
    January 17, 2014
    Registration is now open for the 2014 Summit of the International Transport Forum at the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development). Under the theme ‘Transport for a Changing World: Understanding Trends – Shaping Responses’, this year’s event will take place 21-23 May in Leipzig, Germany. The ITF Summit is the leading global forum for transport policy; it is also referred to as the ‘Davos of Transport’. In 2013, 1,000 participants from 80 countries attended, including transport ministers
  • Transport under the spotlight
    February 13, 2012
    A round-up of some of the major transport-related meetings that have been held in Europe. Compiled by Patrick Smith. Europe has hosted a number of annual events over the last few weeks, where important matters of transport were discussed, reports produced, and decisions taken. ASECAP (the European Association of Tolled Motorways, Bridges and Tunnels Infrastructures Operators); International Transport Forum (ITF); Arena (TRA); International Road Federation (IRF), and the European Construction Industry Federa