Skip to main content

Performance probe for National Highways

A report published last July concerning England's National Highways agency noted several risk areas where problems could arise and which have now done so, according to UK media reports.
By David Arminas February 21, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
England’s Strategic Road Network that takes in motorways and some major A-class highways – a total of 7,240km (© Jonathan Mitchell/Dreamstime)

England’s National Highways agency is being investigated because “performance has dipped in a number of areas”, the independent regulator Office of Rail and Road announced.

A report published last July noted several risk areas where problems could arise and which have now done so, according to UK media reports. These surround the delivery of major schemes and management of road assets under the five-year plan RIS2 – Road Investment Strategy 2, launched in 2020.

According to UK media, the ORR sent a letter to the National Highways chief customer and strategy officer Elliot Shaw, outlining the concerns of the ORR.

“Whilst each individual item of concern is potentially manageable, the number and breadth of our concerns, the repetitive nature of many concerns, and the proximity to the end of the road period, means that we consider that a more formal approach to assessing National Highways’ performance is now appropriate.”

The letter went on to emphasise that this investigation “is about understanding how National Highways is learning lessons and embedding them in its approach to delivering the RIS. It is not necessarily about resolving individual items”.

The agency manages England’s Strategic Road Network that takes in motorways and some major A-class highways – a total of 7,240km. The SRN is the most heavily used part of England’s roads, carrying a third of all traffic and two-thirds of all freight, according to the agency.

Upon its launch, RIS2 committed the central government to spend €32.02 billion (US$34.5 billion) on building new roads as well as road improvements to “reduce the negative impacts of the existing SRN” and “make the network safer, more reliable and more sensitive to the places through which it runs”.

The Lower Thames Crossing and the Stonehenge Tunnel are among the major projects that the agency wished to start by 2025. But due to planning hold-ups, the schemes have been moved forward to what will be RIS3, the next funding regime up to 2030.

The ORR will consider whether National Highways is meeting its performance target metrics and if it has done enough to reach them. Despite the investigation, though, ORR has said that National Highways has achieved many of its aims and delivered improved roads.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK’s M3 motorway gets first orange smart motorway emergency area
    July 19, 2017
    The first of a new-style smart motorway emergency stop area is being trialled on the M3 in England’s county Surrey. The redesigned emergency area has a highly visible orange road surface and better signs to help improve its visibility make it more obvious to drivers on smart motorways, according to Highways England.
  • Addressing road safety issues worldwide
    February 27, 2012
    Actions are planned on road safety but are they enough? - *Charles Melhuish and *Alan Ross report. Deaths and injuries on the world's roads are now a major health concern. Road crashes now cause around 1.3 million deaths and injure or disable as many as 50 million persons globally each year. The vast majority of these deaths and injuries (over 90%) occur in low- and medium- income countries adding to their already overburdened health facilities as well as adversely affecting economic and social development
  • UNCIEF promoting safer commutes for children to education
    June 4, 2015
    Children should have the right of a safe journey to and from school, as part of a wider strategy to build safe, healthy and liveable communities, recommends a new report from UNICEF and the FIA Foundation. The report, ‘Safe to Learn’, was published to mark the 3rd United Nations Global Road Safety Week, which has a theme of child safety. The report was launched at an event at the World Bank in Washington DC by Zoleka Mandela, a global road safety activist, bereaved mother of a road traffic victim, and gran
  • Minister gives green light for UK road schemes
    May 8, 2012
    Roads Minister Mike Penning yesterday gave the green light for development work to be carried out on six new major UK road schemes. The development work, which will take place over the next three years, aims to prime the road schemes for completion in the early years of the next spending review period (post 2015). The six proposed road schemes, which aim to boost economic growth as part of the Government’s National Infrastructure Plan, are: