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

  • Transport corridors to help deliver shared prosperity
    September 28, 2018
    Leading actors set the stage at the European Road Conference, October 22nd -24th in Dubrovnik, Croatia South East Europe is at an important crossroads in the development of its transport connectivity programs, securing a critical role as a gateway for international trade routes. At a time of growing motorisation, the region’s network of roads and highways is currently its largest public asset. However, significant challenges remain to enhance the safety, efficiency, environmental sustainability and re
  • Preserving transport Infrastructure, while adapting to climate change
    June 14, 2019
    Hundreds of lives lost. More than 8,000 people stuck overnight in a flooded airport in Japan in the wake of a typhoon in 2018. Nearly 800% of the gross domestic product (GDP) of the Dutch island of St. Maarten (and 600% of the GDP of the French half, St. Martin) wiped out during the 2017 hurricane season, which devastated many Caribbean island economies, with over $5.4 billion in losses reported in Anguilla, Bahamas, British Virgin Islands, St. Maarten, and Turks and Caicos Islands alone. Transportation in
  • Developing a road safety decision support system for policymakers
    April 22, 2016
    Limited public budgets means that policymakers today, more than ever, need to able to make decisions that are cost-effective and can bring about the highest return in terms of road safety gains Policymakers put great emphasis on making informed decisions to ensure that the policies decided upon are backed up by relevant studies and research. While there are hundreds or even thousands of relevant studies in the field of road safety, these are dispersed across different countries without any interconnection b
  • ERF Position Paper calls for more road markings to boost road safety
    December 13, 2013
    The European Union Road Federation (ERF) has today launched a Position Paper that makes the case for a more widespread use of road markings on Europe’s roads as a means of increasing road safety and reducing the socio-economic impact of accidents. Entitled ‘Marking the way towards a safer future’, the ERF is calling on EU Member States to establish intervention and maintenance policies to guarantee that road markings on Europe’s road remain visible for road users and, at same time, optimise the interaction