Skip to main content

Let’s talk about savings not costs, says European Road Maintenance Forum

New message emerges from event to mark International Road Maintenance Day
By Kristina Smith April 4, 2025 Read time: 3 mins
Better road maintenance can reduce the risks of poor road surfaces

 

Road owners, contractors and suppliers need to talk differently about highways maintenance and renewal projects if they are to get the public on side. Instead of focussing on project costs, they should communicate the benefits – such as fuel cost savings due to improved road surface quality.

This was one of the messages to emerge from an online event on 3 April 2025, organised by the European Road Maintenance Forum (ERMF) and chaired by European Asphalt Pavement Association (EAPA) secretary general Carsten Karcher, to mark International Road Maintenance Day. Over 400 attendees registered from over 40 countries to hear presentations from industry experts that included the case for proactive maintenance, using data from autonomous vehicles, challenges facing commercial fleet operators, and the fuel saving benefits of pavement rehabilitation.

Camino Arce Blanco, technical and business development director at Sociedad Estatal de Infraestructuras del Transporte Terrestre (SEITT) demonstrated the last point with a case study on the M50 motorway which runs around Madrid. Research carried out with the University of Valencia showed that a resurfacing project on 35km of the motorway led to a 10% cut in fuel consumption for the 115,000 vehicles that use it every day – with associated carbon savings.

Juan Jose Potti, president of Spanish the president of Spanish asphalt producers’ association ASEFMA, urged those involved in road maintenance around the world to change the narrative around projects. “We need to say that we can reduce emissions and the consumption of fuel as well as improving comfort and safety,” he said.

Malcolm Simms director of MPA Asphalt at the Mineral Products Association shared details of the Asphalt Industry Alliance’s (AIA’s) Annual Local Authority Road Maintenance (ALARM) study in the UK. Now in its 30th year, the report’s aims remain the same as when it started: to encourage more investment in the local road network with the AIA estimating the current maintenance catch-up cost to be £16.18bn.

Steve Philips, secretary general of the Conference of European Directors of Roads (CEDR), said his members had committed to working in partnership with suppliers, and to better deploy data, to tackle the challenges of ageing infrastructure and climate change. While Christophe Nicodème, director of the European Road Federation (ERF) outlined the cost-saving benefits of preventative maintenance – and the huge costs to economies when roads infrastructure fails.

José Carlos Valdecantos, director at road data specialist Xouba, provided examples of how highways authorities are using data from connected cars to measure road surface conditions such as roughness and friction. Thomas Fabian, chief commercial vehicles officer at the European Automobile Manufacturer’s Association, ACEA, spoke about the need for new charging and refuelling infrastructure and policy changes on vehicle weights if fleet operators are to be fossil fuel free by 2040.

In closing, Karcher called for proactive maintenance strategies with dedicated funding, cross-sector agreements that will make big data available for highways authorities and managers and industry communication campaigns that better demonstrate the value of road maintenance to road users.
 

Related Content

  • A vision of roads
    September 3, 2012
    By 2040 European roads could be built differently, and hopefully be safer, according to the EU research programme NR2C
  • Eurobitume Congress: Prague promises
    June 22, 2016
    Held every four years, the Eurasphalt and Eurobitume congresses have a reputation for revealing developments that will shape the future of bitumen use on Europe’s roads. This year’s event in Prague promises to uphold that reputation. By Kristina Smith The list of locations for the Eurobitume and Eurasphalt (E&E) Congresses reads like a traveller’s dream itinerary: Strasbourg, Barcelona, Vienna, Copenhagen, Istanbul. Now the beautiful city of Prague has been added to the list. Between 1-3 June, presenter
  • 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
  • WJ’s Guardian stud machine to be launched in Europe
    February 23, 2018
    Stud placement just got a lot safer for road operatives in continental Europe thanks to a collaboration between the UK’s WJ Group and Belgium’s ACB. UK-based WJ Group and ACB formed their joint venture company, ACBWJ around 2006 to share product knowledge, marketing and research into thermoplastics and road markings. ACBWJ will officially launch WJ’s Guardian stud placement vehicle into the European market at the Intertraffic exhibition in Amsterdam from March 20-23.