Skip to main content

The European Road Infrastructure Congress 2016: innovative thinking

ERIC 2016, the first European Road Infrastructure Congress, has called on the region’s governments to come together and work more imaginatively with the private sector to bring about a safer and more effective highway network. Speaking at the congress’ opening ceremony, FIA president Jean Todt said that if the EU is serious about improving its road safety record, it is essential to develop a high quality highway infrastructure as quickly as possible. Todt (who is also the United Nations special envoy
October 18, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
ERIC 2016, the first European Road Infrastructure Congress, has called on the region’s governments to come together and work more imaginatively with the private sector to bring about a safer and more effective highway network.

Speaking at the congress’ opening ceremony, FIA president Jean Todt said that if the EU is serious about improving its road safety record, it is essential to develop a high quality highway infrastructure as quickly as possible.

Todt (who is also the United Nations special envoy for road safety as well as the president of the Federation Internationale de l’Automobile) wants to see a more joined up and innovative approach to developing the highway network of the future.

PIARC president elect Claude Van Rooten agreed adding that his organisation, also known as the World Road Association, is convinced that there are many benefits in governments collaborating with the private sector. He sees new thinking on public-private initiatives as a key way forward in the coming years.       

The European Road Infrastructure Congress, which was jointly organised by the European Union Road Federation (ERF) and the Road Safety Markings Association (RSMA), set itself three key objectives. The first was to ask “how can we improve its delivery model in a way that enables road authorities to ask for better solutions while providing industry with an optimal use of public resources and obtaining value for money?”

Secondly, the congress set out to address the question “how can we work together in order to identify practical solutions enabling Europe to achieve its ambitious target of a 50% cut in road fatalities?” And thirdly, the event’s 500 delegates were presented with a series of papers on adapting Europe’s current road infrastructure to the way in which “technological changes and innovations in vehicle technology, road usage and road infrastructure (will change) the road of the future”.

ERIC 2016 took place in Leeds because, according to SWARCO founder and chief executive officer Manfred Swarovski, “the UK Government is adopting innovative management and financing models for the delivery of road infrastructure with the establishment of Highways England as an independent body with a ring-fenced budget of 20-billion-pound sterling over 5 years.”

Speaking as the congress president, Swarovski added that “across Europe, pioneering technology is changing the way we use, manage and maintain our road network. These are exciting times and this 2016 event brings together policy makers, academics, research institutes, road authorities and industry representatives from both Europe and across the world to explore key themes (such as the) delivery of the road infrastructure.”

He also posed two further questions: “how can we improve its delivery model in a way that enables road authorities to ask for better solutions while providing industry with an optimal use of public resources and obtaining value for money?” And, how can Europe “adapt (its) road infrastructure in view of innovations in vehicle technologies.”

The region need to “examine the challenges posed by road automation for the road infrastructure sector and the role of roads in the future European socio-economic model” he concluded.

Related Content

  • The US National Operations Centre of Excellence launches website
    January 21, 2015
    In the United States, the National Operations Centre of Excellence has officially launched a web site to provide the transportation sector with the latest knowledge and management tools. Practitioners, researchers and policymakers will find on the site the latest resources and have the opportunity to discuss topics related to systems management and operations. The centre launched its website at the Transportation Research Board annual meeting in Washington, D.C. in mid January. Click here to view the site
  • The ERF had a key presence at the IRF World Meeting in Riyadh
    January 21, 2014
    Organised every four years, the IRF World Meeting has established itself as one of the most prestigious congresses for road transport professionals. The 17th IRF World Meeting has just concluded its deliberations and lived up to both its reputation and participants' expectations Held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, the event attracted over 2000 participants across six continents that were present as exhibitors and/or had the opportunity to participate in many of the numerous high quality technical and scientific s
  • 2013 Polis Conference urges greater coordination of EU urban transport policies
    December 10, 2013
    Participants at the 2013 Polis Conference in Brussels, Belgium have called for greater coordination of European policies that affect urban and regional transport. Around 350 mobility professionals from across Europe came to debate the continent’s urban and regional transport mobility during the annual event held under the title ‘Innovation in Transport for Sustainable Cities and Regions’. "We need coordination between European environment, climate, research, energy and transport policies as these have a d
  • PPRS: Roads are more than tarmac, they’re a global connection for people
    February 27, 2015
    The successful PPRS event in Paris enabled the sector to set the scene, to see clearly where it’s at technologically. But importantly, it also gave the sector an insight into where it has to go, said Jean-Francois Corte, secretary general of the World Road Association (PIARC), in his closing remarks. It showed that roads are not just a stand-alone national issue for individual governments, but a truly international issue, said Corte on the third and last day of the Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit