Skip to main content

Nova Scotia boosts highway spend

The Canadian province will focus on pavement preservation.
By David Arminas February 8, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Nova Scotia is increasing its road repair and maintenance budget – image courtesy of © Gvictoria, Dreamstime.com

Canada’s province of Nova Scotia is piling two-thirds more money into road construction and maintenance during fiscal 2021 than it spent in the past year.

The provincial government said it will spend around US$392.5 million to upgrade and improve main highways, roads and bridges within the province. Work will include improvements to intersections, building roundabouts and interchanges and constructing turning and passing lanes.

The government has pinpointed replacement for, or repairs to, 19 bridges as well as maintenance to more than 500km of gravel and asphalt roads. Another focus will be on twinning Highways 103, 101, 107 and 104. In total, there will be 11 major construction projects in 2021 to 2022, according to Lloyd Hines, the provincial transportation minister.

The details are laid out Nova Scotia’s Five-Year Highway Improvement Plan 2021-22 edition which cites COVID-19 as an “unprecedented” emergency in the province, which covers an isthmus jutting out into the Atlantic Ocean. The province has a population of around 1 million and is around 55,300km² in size.

The document notes that last May the province announced nearly $180 million investment to keep people working and get the economy moving again. This included almost $78 million for additional paving, gravelling of roads and bridge work.

Unlike many other provinces, Nova Scotia is responsible for maintaining the majority of public roads which account for 90 per cent all the province’s roads. The plans says that the cost per kilometre is the equivalent of over $233,500 to repave, $389,000 to $584,000 or more to upgrade a trunk highway and $3.1 million to $4.7 million to twin a highway.

“While severely damaged roads will continue to be addressed, a portion of our highway improvement budget will be set aside to help conserve paved roads before they become damaged and need costly repairs,” notes the document. “This approach ensures that funding is used more efficiently and effectively. It is more sustainable in the long term.

There will be a focus on pavement preservation usually with a single layer of asphalt, chip seal or micro-surfacing.

Additional operational funding for highway maintenance will be made available as part of the 2021–2022 provincial budget expected to be announced in several weeks.

Related Content

  • 2023 Global Road Achievement Award Winner - Environmental Mitigation: Xingyi Ring Expressway
    March 6, 2024
    An important road link in China has won a prestigious 2023 Global Road Achievement Award
  • Montreal’s new Champlain Bridge is shaping up for Christmas
    September 10, 2018
    Montreal’s Champlain Bridges - one going up, one coming down, reports David Arminas The importance of the new Champlain Bridge to Montreal and Canada can’t be overstated, given the crumbling nature of the not-so-old original Champlain Bridge. The original steel truss affair across the St Lawrence River and the adjacent St Lawrence Seaway canal is “a lifeline for residents and businesses” in greater Montréal, according to the national Auditor General - the public sector spending watchdog. “It accommodates
  • Ukraine’s shattered highways
    July 26, 2024
    With no end to its war with Russia in sight, Ukraine is also fighting hard to cope with a growing backlog of major infrastructure projects, especially in terms of rebuilding the country’s roads and bridges. David Arminas reports.
  • PPRS Nice 2018: maintenance moves mountains
    June 22, 2018
    Strategic maintenance was a major theme at the second Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit in Nice, France. The world is changing, mobility is changing and so roads must change and adapt for the future.” With this brief statement, Jacques Tavernier opened the second PPRS Summit. “At the same time there is a growing awareness of poor or non-existent maintenance for highways. The question for this conference is how to adapt road maintenance in the face of this challenge,” said Tavernier, in his role as