Skip to main content

UK infrastructure at risk

The entire infrastructure investment programme in the United Kingdom - Europe’s second biggest economy - is at serious risk as the country begins the process of leaving the European Union “During the next five years, GDP Growth in the UK will be half of what it was in the previous five years,” warned Alexander Jan, a director at UK-based infrastructure designer Arup. The value of the currency will continue to crash and “there will be a doubling in the cost of government borrowing”. This is bad news f
February 9, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
The entire infrastructure investment programme in the United Kingdom - Europe’s second biggest economy - is at serious risk as the country begins the process of leaving the European Union

“During the next five years, GDP Growth in the UK will be half of what it was in the previous five years,” warned Alexander Jan, a director at UK-based infrastructure designer 1419 Arup. The value of the currency will continue to crash and “there will be a doubling in the cost of government borrowing”.

This is bad news for a country which has a “mainly publicly-owned road infrastructure and very little private sector involvement”.

He believes that Europe’s big institutional investors like the EIB (European Investment Bank) and the EBRD (European Bank for Reconstruction and Development) “will now pull back from the UK” to focus on other EU member economies. This will make it ever harder for the UK’s local authorities to invest in infrastructure projects in a country that “has a highly centralised fiscal regime”.

Perhaps the solution will lie in more toll roads for the UK, asked Pedro Pinto of Ascendi. He outlined the success of electronic toll collection in Portugal, the sole EU state collecting tolls from all type of vehicles across its 2,900km of motorways.

With 95% of Portugal’s total motorway network tolled, the country is truly wedded to the concept of the ‘user pays’. Pinto said that mobile enforcement teams and more cross-border international cooperation are crucial if Europe wants to move in this direction and to police an effective tolling regime. He suggested that it is possible that the industry is planning and managing its road networks on the wrong basis altogether.

In a stimulating debate on “big data and the future of road infrastructure”, Invision Consulting’s Christos Koulouris said that “the road of the future will move away from being an asset” to something that is designed, built and managed more as “a public service”.

In the consumer sector, the customer is king. Brands spend millions of dollars on perception studies and high street retailers put huge emphasis on their customer care. Koulouris says the highway sector can learn from this. “As an industry, we are going to need more care of user and customer needs.” Does the new road go where people want it to go? Does it have the sort of service areas that users like, and are they in the right place?

“I think that the highway of the future will see us moving away from evaluating and managing roads under the traditional asset management model,” Koulouris said. “I can see us moving towards a service provision model.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK prime minister warns leaving EU a threat to infrastructure work
    May 17, 2016
    Prime Minister David Cameron has that major road projects could be under threat if the United Kingdom were to leave the European Union. Cameron reportedly said leaving the EU would have a “devastating impact” because funding such as the €20.4 billion invested into all types of infrastructure projects by the European Investment Bank over the past three years would dry up. Extension of the nearly 100km M8 motorway in Scotland between the Scottish capital Edinburgh and Glasgow is one such project that
  • Astec Industries CEO and president Ben Brock says stay focused and true to win
    July 8, 2016
    Core values, constant innovation and looking after the customer are the key drivers for Ben Brock, chief executive officer and president of Astec Industries. How does he keep his company ahead of the pack and what does he think that the future holds? if you ask Ben Brock to explain how his Astec Industries group has managed to do so well for so long, he doesn’t even pause for breath. “That’s easy, I thank the good doctor. He always told me: do good work and take care of the customer ... which is exactl
  • Road user subscriptions will fund the road ecosystems of the future says ERF Lab
    December 14, 2018
    The highway of the future will not be a physical asset created and maintained by the construction industry … it will increasingly be seen as part of an emerging global services sector. “Every day we hear about Mobility as a Service (MaaS), but what about Roads as a Service?” says Christophe Nicodème, general director of the European Union Road Federation (ERF). “The role of the road is changing. We need to think much more carefully about planning (highway) infrastructure in terms of people’s needs. We must
  • Julián Núñez, head of ASECAP offers a little Spanish enlightenment
    May 1, 2018
    Julián Núñez, president of ASECAP, gets his teeth into the vision of a European strategy for toll roads. David Arminas reports from Madrid Getting European politicians to agree to a long-term cross-border highway infrastructure programme for toll roads is extremely difficult. It’s a bit like pulling teeth. People want to avoid the pain. This is perhaps a bad analogy to use in the case of Julián Núñez, president of ASECAP - European Association of Operators of Toll Road Infrastructures. Núñez had just sat