Skip to main content

Programme planned for Paris pavement preservation summit

Plans are now in hand for the AEMA-ARRA-ISSA-PPRA-IBEF-FP2 Pavement Preservation World Summit. This will be held from February 22nd – 25th 2015 at the Palais des Congrès Convention Center in the French capital, Paris. The website for the event is also in place: pprsparis2015.com and gives details of the programme. According to the organisers, the PPRS Paris 2015 event will provide a discussion focus for shared projects and ambitions. It follows the PPRA’s decision to organise an annual meeting in Paris in 2
February 12, 2014 Read time: 3 mins
Plans are now in hand for the AEMA-ARRA-250 ISSA-PPRA-IBEF-1294 FP2 Pavement Preservation World Summit. This will be held from February 22nd – 25th 2015 at the Palais des Congrès Convention Center in the French capital, Paris. The website for the event is also in place: pprsparis2015.com and gives details of the programme. According to the organisers, the PPRS Paris 2015 event will provide a discussion focus for shared projects and ambitions. It follows the PPRA’s decision to organise an annual meeting in Paris in 2015, IBEF’s drive to continue on in the wake of the WOE, and FP2’s desire to be part of the event in the framework of its second International Conference on Pavement Preservation. The organisers say the event is needed as it will help motivate decision-makers to maintain road networks at a level which remains compatible with global economic requirements. The need for greater awareness is a shared issue amongst international associations, such as the World Road Association and the 1202 European Road Federation.

The first target of the PPRS Paris 2015 is to raise awareness about the need to maintain road networks amongst the political decision-makers whose job it is to allocate the financial resources. The PPRS Paris 2015 also aims to foster an exchange of ideas and the sharing of experience amongst key stakeholders. These bodies include public administrations and road agencies that define road maintenance policy, the companies and the road industry that bring these decisions to life downstream, and the equipment builders that contribute to technological innovation.

Best practices exist worldwide and an exchange of experience will enable the participants to bring in new ideas, based on genuinely successful experiences. This includes products and processes, network management, and contracting aspects with regard to road agencies and medium to long-term maintenance contracts. In addition, the PPRS Paris 2015 will also reflect an open view of the future and a cross disciplinary approach, highlighting industry wide dynamics, supported by the decision-makers.  

PPRS Paris 2015 is a two and a half day event and will include an exhibit area as well as presentations, with two plenary sessions and three parallel sessions. The speakers will be selected by committee but there will be no call for papers. The plenary speakers will be selected for their international profile and will be asked to speak on more general, institutional subjects.  The selection will take the international aspect of the event into account. The PPRS is neither an American nor a French event and will be international, while some 400 - 600 industry figures are expected to participate.

The organising associations (IBEF, AEMA, ARRA, ISSA and FP2) have subcontracted the organisation out to Package, with the financial risk being borne by the associations (except for FP2). A steering committee has been formed including Mike Krissoff, (executive director of the AEMA, ARRA et ISSA), Jim Moulthrop (executive director of FP2), Jean Claude Roffé and Étienne le Bouteiller for IBEF and as the interface with Package.

The initial program committee includes two representatives from each association:  Bernard Eckmann and Siobhan Mc Kelvey (IBEF), Mike Helmsley and Gaylon Baumgartner (AEMA), Robert Jerman and Carter Dabney (ISSA), Stephen Cross and Todd Thomas (ARRA), Larry Galehouse and Rod Birdsall (FP2). Representatives from other organisations will be joining the committee at a later date.  

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Pavement Preservation & Recycling: pay now or pay more later
    December 10, 2014
    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
  • 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
  • World Road Association Secretary General: ‘Act now on global road infrastructure’
    May 29, 2014
    The Secretary General of the World Road Association-PIARC has stressed the need for urgent unified action to maintain international road infrastructure. Jean-François Corté, whose association unites the road administrations of 120 governments and has members, individuals, companies, authorities and organisations in over 140 countries, spoke ahead of the keenly awaited PPRS Paris 2015 Congress 22-25 February 2015, which he is chairing. Emphasising the importance of quality road infrastructure and the need
  • The ERF fully supports the PPRS Nice 2018
    May 16, 2017
    The first Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit (PPRS) took place in Paris in February 2015. This event, with more than 1,000 participants, represented an essential milestone for the road community in Europe and beyond. With its impressive programme, it highlighted the necessity to better preserve and maintain road infrastructure and urban road networks, as fundamental support towards the mobility of people and goods. This event gave public and private stakeholders the opportunity to present a variety