Skip to main content

“It’s road maintenance stupid,” MEP Michael Cramer tells pavement preservation and recycling summit PPRS Paris 2015

Road owners around the world “need a highway to heaven” according to Michael Cramer MEP, chairman of the European Parliament transport committee. Speaking at PPRS Paris 2015, the pavement preservation and recycling summit, Cramer said that Europe’s current road policy “lies somewhere between AC/DC’s Highway to Hell and Led Zeppelin’s Stairway to Heaven” and that, to mis-quote Bill Clinton, the EU needs to start thinking “it’s road maintenance stupid” whenever the subject of highway investment is under consi
February 23, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
Road owners around the world “need a highway to heaven” according to Michael Cramer MEP, chairman of the European Parliament transport committee. Speaking at 7924 PPRS 2015, the pavement preservation and recycling summit, Cramer said that Europe’s current road policy “lies somewhere between AC/DC’s Highway to Hell and Led Zeppelin’s Stairway to Heaven” and that, to mis-quote Bill Clinton, the EU needs to start thinking “it’s road maintenance stupid” whenever the subject of highway investment is under consideration.

“We need to move away from new mega-projects and put in place a large-scale, long-term maintenance package for all transport modes,” Cramer says, because the “3287 EU has not done a good job.” He firmly believes that road owners and operators world-wide have got to find new ways to make more of the existing infrastructure. “It’s time for a new dogma,” he told the conference of more than 800 delegates, “we must do better with what already have.”

Almost three-quarters of all EU road spending goes on new roads, and only 27% on maintenance. As a result, “we are heading in the wrong direction,” says Cramer, not least “because every minister loves cutting the red tape on a big new project. Our leaders would be much better preserving what we have already got … this would have a huge impact on the climate and on our national budgets.”

Health, quality of life, CO2 emissions and affordable mobility are all key issues that would benefit from a much stronger emphasis on road maintenance rather than new-build says Cramer, a view that was echoed by keynote speaker and conference chairman Jean-Francois Corte, head of 3141 PIARC, the World Road Association.

All around the globe, roads are decaying, bridges are having to close, accident rates are rising and congestion is worsening because we are not spending enough money on maintaining our highways said Corte. “A lack of action in this area is, in effect, a disinvestment in our future,” he said, “and we are creating a massive burden for our children in the years ahead.”

Most of the roads in the world’s developed economies were built in the second half of the twentieth century, Corte told PPRS Paris 2015, and “they have been the trade routes that have allowed improved social development and more trade.” Today, however, they have become “ageing assets that have not been well maintained and they are fragile.” Ever greater levels of congestion, ever higher traffic flows and poor quality repairs are hitting the world’s leading developed economies hard, and the economic crisis of 2008 is far from over. The time for action is now.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Book now … the early booking deadline for PPRS 2015 in Paris has been extended
    November 13, 2014
    Book now … the first Pavement Preservation &-Recycling (World) Summit (PPRS 2015), due to take place in the Palais des Congrès in Paris from February 22 2015 to February 25 2015, has extended its deadline for early bird registration November 15 2014.
  • Astec launches Don't Let America Dead End road repair campaign
    January 15, 2015
    A major US manufacturer of equipment for building and restoring roads is spearheading a national campaign to have the Federal Government increase funding for America’s much needed highway repairs. Ben Brock, chief executive of Astec Industries, based in Tennessee, is urging people in the transportation and related industries to send a message to their Congressman through the Don’t Let America Dead End website. Astec’s Don't Let America Dead End also includes a national trade ad campaign, direct outrea
  • 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
  • Lobby harder and louder if you want better roads says UK transport politician Christopher Chope at PPRS Paris 2015
    February 24, 2015
    A huge leap in highway investment, more privately-run toll motorways and a stronger road industry lobby would all be welcomed by Christopher Chope, chairman of the UK’s highway maintenance all-party parliamentary group. Speaking exclusively to World Highways at the PPRS Paris 2015 pavement preservation and recycling summit, Chope said “yes, I would very much like to have a lot more capital investment in the roads sector. There are still too many pinch points out there … where one motorway meets another for