Skip to main content

Morocco looks to expand road network and also improve safety

Morocco’s Transport and Infrastructure Ministry has plans in hand to expand the country’s road network in a bid to boost the economy. Safety improvements will also ensure that the road network is safer, with Morocco instituting new road safety policies. Estimates suggest that up to 45,000km of roads and as well as 208 bridges will be required to provide access to the country’s rural areas. Extending the road network would cost up to US$5.8 billion, according to a study carried out for the Transport and Infr
November 28, 2012 Read time: 2 mins

Morocco’s Transport and Infrastructure Ministry has plans in hand to expand the country’s road network in a bid to boost the economy. Safety improvements will also ensure that the road network is safer, with Morocco instituting new road safety policies. Estimates suggest that up to 45,000km of roads and as well as 208 bridges will be required to provide access to the country’s rural areas. Extending the road network would cost up to US$5.8 billion, according to a study carried out for the Transport and Infrastructure Ministry.

Meanwhile the country is establishing a new national agency focussing on transport security and regulations. This is intended to bring together road safety and accident prevention moves. It will oversee regulations and organising the transport sector. The agency will also ensure transport firms comply with regulatory procedures, as well as controlling tariffs and supervising registration centres, driving schools and technical control centres. Morocco suffers over 4,000 fatalities/year on the country's roads and this costs the country an estimated $1.61 billion/year, not to mention the human toll. In 2011, there were 67,082 road crashes in Morocco, an increase of 2.48% from 2010. There were also 4,222 deaths caused by road crashes in 2011, a jump of 11.75% over 2010.

Related Content

  • Safety improvements in developed nations
    August 20, 2013
    At a time when road safety is posing a significant threat to both human health and economic development around the world, it is worth noting that in many developed nations the situation is improving. The United Nations has identified road safety as a major problem and established its Decade of Action for Road Safety for the 2010-2020 period, in a bid to cut the growing death toll. But while developing nations are seeing a vast growth in vehicle numbers and road fatalities, the improving road safety situ
  • iRAP: cost of road deaths and injuries continues
    August 26, 2024
    Road deaths alone are estimated to cost US$753 billion annually, according to the latest annual Safety Insights Explorer report.
  • Latin America road safety plan proposed
    June 14, 2019
    A new report suggests key strategies to cut road deaths and injuries in Latin America. The report was commissioned by Bloomberg Philanthropies and shows that more than 25,000 Latin American lives could be saved and over 170,000 serious injuries prevented by 2030 if United Nations (UN) vehicle safety regulations were applied by four key countries in the region—Argentina, Chile, Mexico and Brazil. The report was prepared by the UK-based Transport Research Laboratory (TRL). The aim of the study was to estimat
  • Road safety insights from iRAP
    August 5, 2024
    Road safety insights are now available from iRAP.