Skip to main content

IRF Members launch regional committee for Central Asia

Against a background of unprecedented connectivity investments bridging East and West, the formation of a regional committee will assist member organisations. It will allow them to gain access to a wider pool of knowledge on regional infrastructure programmes, and solutions designed to optimise road investments. Central Asia is a loosely defined geographic area bridging the eastern fringes of Europe to the borders of China. Common factors between these countries include a shared history of relatively recen
October 23, 2017 Read time: 2 mins

Against a background of unprecedented connectivity investments bridging East and West, the formation of a regional committee will assist member organisations. It will allow them to gain access to a wider pool of knowledge on regional infrastructure programmes, and solutions designed to optimise road investments.

Central Asia is a loosely defined geographic area bridging the eastern fringes of Europe to the borders of China. Common factors between these countries include a shared history of relatively recent transition from planned to market economies, as well as the cross-border impacts of the Belt & Road Initiative, a transformational connectivity program promoted by China. Buoyed by new financial instruments, including the New Silk Road Fund and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, Belt & Road has translated into an investment race as countries across the region position themselves to diversify their economies away from resource dependency, and reap benefits from the new trade routes.

Against this backdrop, the International Road Federation has an essential contribution to make to the design and management standards of new roads that will provide short- and long-term benefits in those countries where they are being built. As a cross-industry platform bridging road agencies and other actors already present in the region, 2462 IRF is well positioned to establish itself as a regional broker of applied knowledge, ensuring a lasting legacy of sustainable roads and skilled workers.

The formation of a regional committee will provide the necessary focus to IRF’s consultation and outreach efforts. It will also assist participating member organisations in gaining access to a wider pool of knowledge on regional infrastructure programs, and solutions designed to optimise road investments.

Related Content

  • IRF Washington Names its 2016 Industry Professional of the Year:
    October 18, 2016
    Malaysia’s Minister of Works receives IRF’s top award. YB Dato’ Sri Haji Fadillah bin Haji Yusof, Minister of Works and one of the chief architects behind Malaysia’s spectacular highway investment programme has been nominated to receive IRF’s most distinguished individual honor. Established in 1951, IRF’s Professional of the Year award recognises eminent public, private and education sector professionals with an outstanding track record of leadership and commitment to the road transport industry. Over the y
  • Setting ambitious road safety requirements
    May 14, 2015
    IRF calls for road safety audits on all donor-funded projects By the end of the United Nations Decade of Action for Road Safety 2011-2020, it is estimated that the World Bank and other major development donors will collectively have invested well over US$100 billion in road infrastructure programmes across hundreds of individual projects, representing a considerable opportunity to introduce or strengthen risk management practices from the design stage. In January 2014, the International Road Federat
  • IRF presents new online training resources
    April 30, 2021
    As the world continues to deal with the long-term implications of the COVID-19 pandemic, the International Road Federation has heeded the call by the world’s road professionals for more online training resources
  • IRF Washington launches committee on road user charging
    March 6, 2017
    At a time when many governments and city authorities around the world are challenged to manage transport demand and recover costs from road users, members of the International Road Federation have launched a new committee dedicated to tolling and other forms of road user charging (RUC).