Skip to main content

Users will drive investment policy, say keynote speakers at PPRS 2018

The world’s highway networks are facing “a major paradigm shift” from a past that was based on hardware, engineering, economic, analogue, vehicle and supply driven solutions to a future that will be based instead on software, social, environmental, digital, multi-modal demand-driven solutions. Think road users and the customers first if you want to help drive future road policy said Young Tae Kim, secretary general of the International Transport Forum (ITF), speaking at the opening ceremony of PPRS 2018
March 26, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
Young Tae Kim, secretary general of the International Transport Forum (ITF): think road users and customers

The world’s highway networks are facing “a major paradigm shift” from a past that was based on hardware, engineering, economic, analogue, vehicle and supply driven solutions to a future that will be based instead on software, social, environmental, digital, multi-modal demand-driven solutions.

Think road users and the customers first if you want to help drive future road policy said Young Tae Kim, secretary general of the International Transport Forum (ITF), speaking at the opening ceremony of PPRS 2018, the Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit in Nice, France.

“When public budgets are tight, maintenance spend tends to be cut,” the ITF boss told the conference’s 900 delegates from more than 50 countries. “This is why worldwide road maintenance spend is no longer increasing.”

Tae Kim recommended thinking about the future in “five key phrases: environmental sustainability; smart digital technology; safety and security; inclusiveness focused on the social influence of good roads; and the promotion of economic growth”.

In the past, Kim added, road transport policy was greatly influenced, if not decided by the suppliers and the providers of haulage and public transport. “Today, we are seeing policy that will be demand-driven. The customer or end user will be more important. Things won’t be government-led, they will be led by the private sector. The shift from analogue to digital technologies will lead to more efficient regulation too. And a new holistic approach is emerging where road maintenance will be just as, if not more important than new road construction projects.”

Bud Wright, the chief executive officer of AASHTO, the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, took the same line at the opening ceremony of PPRS 2018. He also believes that the future success of the world highways sector lies in the way in which the roads are used.

“We need more mobility, more safety. We need transport more than ever,” he told the conference. “The seamless movement of goods and people is essential to economic growth.”

High-performance logistics will supply the home workers and growing home delivery industries of the future. But, to get there, Wright said that the world’s highway officials need to meet a series of challenges: an ageing workforce; too many pensioners sapping the national budget; the need to get more young people recruited in the sector; automated vehicles; rotting road surfaces; decaying bridges; and environmental concerns.

Unless the world’s developed economies want to see fewer movement of goods and people, and suffer the GDP declines involved, Wright said that new thinking is required.

“We [in the US] do not have a clear vision on how to fund a transport network that will no longer be able to depend on gasoline and fuel taxes. We need to become visionaries and innovators again,” he said.

Related Content

  • LiuGong invests hard to be seen as made, tested and supported in Europe
    January 26, 2018
    LiuGong is investing hard in Europe, determined to be seen as a global player whose products are “made in Europe, tested in Europe and supported in Europe.” Along with new European headquarters based in Warsaw, LiuGong is also opening up a new European production line and a new continent-wide parts distribution centre at its Dressta manufacturing centre in Stalowa Wola. Geoff Hadwick reports
  • UK infrastructure at risk
    February 9, 2017
    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
  • 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
  • IRF Global to Shape Discussions on Future Roads – key meeting point
    July 4, 2018
    A new international meeting point gathers road innovators with the world’s top policymakers. Technology and innovations are evolving at a pace never seen before in the history of the road and transport sector. From innovations in materials, such as self-healing concrete and rubberised asphalt, to advances in construction equipment automation, and of course, the dawn of the connected and automated vehicle, many experts agree that road mobility is on the verge of a new era. “With such remarkable development