Skip to main content

Britain’s local roads face severe degradation warns National Audit Office

The British government’s decision to cut back hard on its highways maintenance spending plans will severely degrade the quality of local roads across the UK and risk driving up the long-term costs for the country’s hard-pressed local authorities, the National Audit Office has warned in a new report out this month entitled “Funding for local transport.” The NAO has also told the UK’s ministers that they must be much clearer about who they think should take forward the decision-making process once the devolut
November 2, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The British government’s decision to cut back hard on its highways maintenance spending plans will severely degrade the quality of local roads across the UK and risk driving up the long-term costs for the country’s hard-pressed local authorities, the 5285 National Audit Office has warned in a new report out this month entitled “Funding for local transport.”

The NAO has also told the UK’s ministers that they must be much clearer about who they think should take forward the decision-making process once the devolution of local major transport schemes has taken place.

The auditors are worried about how the 5432 Department for Transport (DfT) will ensure that the UK’s new local transport bodies – which will be made up of Local Enterprise Partnerships and councils – are going to be able to meet minimum standards. The DfT has also been urged to clarify how local transport data can be brought together to judge value for money.

Amyas Morse, head of the National Audit Office, says “as the Department for Transport devolves more funding to a local level, it needs to make sure it has the appropriate assurance over the spending. It also needs a clear plan of action establishing how it will identify and intervene in cases of operational or financial failure in transport provision.”

The DfT has welcomed the NAO report, saying “we agree that in taking forward decentralisation it is important to ensure there is appropriate transparency and accountability at the right levels, to drive value for money. For example, we are applying these principles in developing the detailed assurance framework for devolution of local major transport schemes.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • PPRS: smarter, more sophisticated asset management is needed
    March 27, 2018
    Highway organisations around the world will need ever-more sophisticated frameworks to ensure their asset management is up-to-date and fit-for-purpose. Jacques Tavernier, chairman of PPRS Nice 2018, and Claude van Rooten, president of PIARC, the World Road Association emphasised the point at at this week’s Pavement Preservations and Recycling Summit. A nation’s roads are its first and most important “main asset … essential for a country’s economic, social and environmental development”, said van Roote
  • Thailand road development planning
    May 2, 2019
    A group of experts from Thailand have been visiting the UK to research methods that would help boost road development. The planning and engineering team from Thailand’s Department of Rural Roads (DRR) have been holding meetings with UK counterparts about adopting a scheme similar to its Highways Authority Approval Scheme (HAPAS). The DRR has the responsibility for over 47,700km of Thailand’s 396,600km road network, upgrading paved and earth roads and delivering bridge projects. This is intended to boost so
  • Investing in road transport boost economies
    April 30, 2015
    Transport investment faces a shortfall that can perhaps never be breached – David Arminas writes There “will never be sufficient funds for all planned road activities,” said Ben Gericke, transport specialist at The World Bank. The road maintenance industry is going to have to use the best possible contract strategy to win the investment it needs. Speaking at the PPRS Paris 2015 Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit, Gericke said that the best way for the global highway construction and road maint
  • TISPOL Conference: autonomous vehicles high on safety agenda
    February 2, 2017
    Safety and autonomous vehicles exercised the minds of some of Europe’s senior police officers at the recent TISPOL European Traffic Police Network Conference in the UK. The European Union looks like missing its target of halving the number of people killed on its roads each year by 2020. Just when European police forces are trying to get back on target, along comes the autonomous vehicle with all its inherent safety issues.