Skip to main content

Resilient roads: cooperation is key

Now is the time for national road agencies and the private sector to cooperate on building more climate resilient roads, urges Dr Erik Denneman
By Dr Erik Denneman June 14, 2021 Read time: 4 mins
The tides of change mean future highway structures must be more resistant to damage, from whatever source

Bitumen and bituminous products such as asphalt soften as the temperature increases and can lead to road surface deformation. However, a couple of degrees in pavement temperature plays a relatively minor role in the overall performance of bitumen.

To put it in perspective, in the US bitumen specification system, the temperature differences between two grades of bitumen is 6°C, as measured during the hottest week of the year. This means it would take a significant rise in temperature as a result of climate change for different grades of bitumen to be necessitated.

In many regions of the world, the increase of moisture in road structures and more frequent flood events, whether due to increase in rainfall, or sea level rise, pose the greatest threat to road infrastructure.

Moisture-related pavement and road failures following severe rainfall events or floods can be costly to repair. As an example, the 2010–2013 floods in the Australian state of Queensland cost the government nearly US$5 billion in road repairs - half for reconstruction of pavements.

Other more localised climate change-related risks to road infrastructure include increases in the occurrence of landslides, rockfall and avalanches, drought, bush fires and loss of physical support due to melting of permafrost.

Extreme weather occurrences where few have happened are becoming more common (photos: David Arminas/World Highways)
Extreme weather occurrences where few have happened are becoming more common (photos: David Arminas/World Highways)

Mitigation strategies are highly dependent on local conditions and the original structure of the road. Thick road structures in urban areas are typically more flood and moisture resistant than rural roads. However, there may still be a need to improve drainage or increase the road level to new flood safe levels. This is because critical rainfall patterns and flood risk for which the road was built may have changed since the original design.

In rural settings where roads carry less traffic, road structures tend to be shallow and more prone to moisture and flood damage. For these roads appropriate drainage is even more important than for their urban counterparts.

Many countries, especially in the developing world, have a large proportion of unpaved gravel roads in rural areas. These are particularly vulnerable and climate adaptation strategies include paving the road surface, often with a sprayed seal.  

Cost-effective measures to improve the flood resilience of rural roads include stabilising the road base using foamed bitumen. In Queensland, this technology is used in regions receiving more than 500mm of rainfall annually. This measure proved its worth during Cyclone Debbie in 2017 with only minimal remedial works required on pavements stablised with foam bitumen.

Australia is not alone in this regard; Governments across the world are developing strategies to mitigate the impact of flooding. But to achieve the most successful and desirable long-term outcomes, companies such as Puma Bitumen must work in partnership with transport departments.

To avoid the bitumen industry contributing to climate change itself, it is hugely important that the industry looks at ways it can reduce carbon emissions. It is encouraging to see the continued transition of our economy from a linear model (take – make – use – dispose) to a circular one (make – use – reuse – remake –  recycle). Given asphalt is 100% reusable, we are well on our way to achieving the goal of a truly circular economy within the sector.

One of the best examples that demonstrates how the industry is recycling other waste materials is the use of tyre-derived crumb rubber modified binders. Puma Bitumen has been using this sustainable and resilient technology to provide improved performance in sprayed seals and asphalt, especially in severe and challenging conditions.

Increasingly, road authorities are investigating opportunities to use these high-performance crumb rubber binders on their road networks. It reduces waste while maintaining good quality infrastructure.

Puma Bitumen is continually striving to make our operations and materials more sustainable. We recently created OLEXOCRUMB, a binder that combines tyre-derived rubber with styrene-butadiene-styrene. It performs as strongly as conventional polymer modified binders and was used in multiple Australian state road and local government trials last year. It has now become a standard binder.

Importantly, this asphalt binder solution is sustainable, as it incorporates 10% recycled tyre rubber. Furthermore, for every tonne of OLEXOCRUMB binder produced, the equivalent of 15 passenger tyres will be recycled.

Erik Denneman is the technical manager for the Middle East and Asia Pacific with Puma Bitumen. He is a leading expert within the company’s Global Technology Centre in Altona, Melbourne, Australia. Before joining Puma, he was director of technology and leadership with the Australian Asphalt Pavement Association.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Caterpillar eyes better performance in 2015 amid stormy weather
    May 13, 2015
    Caterpillar vice president Paolo Fellin sums up the past year for the global equipment manufacturer and looks at the increasing importance of telematics and machine control. David Arminas reports from Caterpillar’s Demonstration and Learning Centre in Malaga, southern Spain First the good news. Despite the difficulties, especially of the financial markets, 2014 was “a record year for a lot of things” for global heavy equipment maker Caterpillar.Now the bad news. Hang onto your seats because despite some
  • Eurobitume Preview 2012
    June 15, 2012
    Asphalt and bitumen industry attention is turning to the Eurasphalt and Eurobitume (E&E) Congress Congress being held next month in Istanbul, Turkey. Guy Woodford reports Held every four years, the Eurasphalt and Eurobitume Congress is always a well-attended event that can be both commercially beneficial and thought-provoking for asphalt and bitumen industry companies and organisations. Judging by a joint statement released by Eurobitume president Alberto Bardesi and European Asphalt Pavement Associatio
  • Game-changing ideas that deliver daily life and continue to evolve
    December 14, 2016
    As World Highways celebrates its 25-year anniversary this month, we thought that it would be a good moment to take a step back and look at the exciting times we live and work in, and pick out a few of the game-changing new products, technologies and services that have brought about so much innovation in our industry over the past quarter of a century. Where will these new ways of thinking and working take us next? The global highways market has been transformed in the lifetime of World Highways by high-v
  • Tarmac goes low-carbon on UK’s A64
    December 20, 2024
    The trial was delivered on a 2.4km section of England’s A64 strategic highway, the eastbound carriageway at junction 44 near the town of Bramham in North Yorkshire county.