Skip to main content

Pavement Preservation & Recycling: pay now or pay more later

Governments need more than ever to plan long-term highway strategies or face an increasing backlog of increasingly expensive maintenance requirements. “Insufficient maintenance has created a backlog and is affecting service levels,” said Jean-Francois Corte, secretary general of the World Road Association (PIARC), based in Paris. How to stop this seemingly endless downward spiral is what attendees to the major Pavement Preservation & Recycling Summit in Paris will find out in February. “What’s needed ri
December 10, 2014 Read time: 3 mins
RSSGovernments need more than ever to plan long-term highway strategies or face an increasing backlog of increasingly expensive maintenance requirements.

“Insufficient maintenance has created a backlog and is affecting service levels,” said Jean-Francois Corte, secretary general of the World Road Association (3141 PIARC), based in Paris.

How to stop this seemingly endless downward spiral is what attendees to the major Pavement Preservation & Recycling Summit in Paris (7924 PPRS 2015) will find out in February.

“What’s needed right now is at least a medium-term vision to embrace the right type of maintenance, a strong strategy. Because there has been insufficient maintenance, road networks are degrading faster. Many highways authorities don’t have this medium- or long-term approach to highway maintenance because they are bound by their government’s annual budgets.”

While there has been a focus on building very quickly a vast road network in the past 10 to 20 years, there has at the same time been severe maintenance cuts in the past decade during the economic crisis and downturn. Highways authorities have been having a tough time convincing their government of the importance of maintenance, especially as a large amount of this new infrastructure is coming up for their first major maintenance needs.

If organisations do have a long-term maintenance strategy, it can often be thwarted by a government’s desire for short-term savings. This can result in authorities continually having to revamp their maintenance strategies based on decreasing highways budgets.

“This precarious situation means we are entering a period of serious highway degradation where more than just general maintenance will be needed in the near future. This is what attendees will hear about at the upcoming Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit in Paris,” said Corte, who will give the welcoming address on day one.

“The event, from February 22-25, will explore the social and economic implications of not maintaining highways versus a well maintained network. Importantly, attendees will learn how to put the business case forward during these austere times to ensure more investment is there when and where it is needed.”

The event will not be simply an equipment exposition, but where professionals can share knowledge on processes, planning, strategies and best practice, he said. Held at the Palais des Congrès, it will include conferences, specific workshops, an exhibition and technical visits.

A recent publication by PIARC, called The Importance of Road Maintenance, is available as a free download on the PIARC website.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • AEM and bauma partnership for African show
    February 14, 2014
    A new partnership between the Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM) and Messe München has seen the bauma Africa event renamed: BAUMA CONEXPO AFRICA. The event has new dates and will now be held from September 15th to 18th 2015, but will remain in the South African city Johannesburg. The first event was held under the name of bauma Africa, and it celebrated a successful premiere with 754 exhibitors from 38 countries and 14,700 visitors from over 100 countries. As part of their cooperation on internati
  • 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
  • New functionality for infrasfructure design software
    March 20, 2012
    Chris Bradshaw, Autodesk's vice-president for the Infrastructure Solutions division spoke to World Highways. The launch of the fourth version of its Civil 3D design software early this year will see software maker Autodesk getting serious about its road and general civil engineering package. Bigger projects can be handled in the 2008 version, and a range of new functionality is being added. "Though not everything we would like yet," said Chris Bradshaw, Autodesk's vicepresident for the Infrastructure S
  • Best practices in road asset management
    February 10, 2021
    Maintaining roads efficiently is a complex task. Road maintenance organisations are looking for more efficient, cost-effective, and safe ways to maintain their networks. This means optimisation across the board: network inspections, maintenance programming, and inventory management.