Skip to main content

RAC blasts UK Government's poor infrastructure investment

The UK’s motorists are facing increased congestion and longer delays due to a steady increase in vehicle numbers combined with reduced spending on transport infrastructure. A report by the RAC Foundation warns that there will be 4,000,000 more cars on the UK’s roads in the next 25 years, while the UK’s Government has not explained what plans it has to cope with the projected increase in traffic. The report predicts a 43% rise in traffic volume by 2035, with the biggest increase in the East Midlands. The fou
May 14, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
RSSThe UK’s motorists are facing increased congestion and longer delays due to a steady increase in vehicle numbers combined with reduced spending on transport infrastructure. A report by the 5521 RAC Foundation warns that there will be 4,000,000 more cars on the UK’s roads in the next 25 years, while the UK’s Government has not explained what plans it has to cope with the projected increase in traffic. The report predicts a 43% rise in traffic volume by 2035, with the biggest increase in the East Midlands.

The foundation, working with consultancy group 1419 Arup, identified 96 key road schemes currently waiting for a decision by the 5432 Department for Transport. The foundation claimed the top 10 projects on this list would offer a six fold return on investment. But RAC Foundation director Professor Stephen Glaister said, "Forget about Plan B, ministers do not even have a Plan A for dealing with the awful conditions forecast for the roads in the years ahead. It is a case of jams today, and even more jams tomorrow. The Department for Transport's own figures show that by 2035 traffic is set to rise by almost 50% and delays by more than 50%. And these are only average figures."

Key projects still awaiting the decision to go into action include: A453 widening (M1 to A52) Nottingham; A5-M1 Dunstable northern bypass, Bedfordshire; A21 Tonbridge to Pembury dual carriageway, Kent; Kingkerswell bypass, Devon; Leeds Inner Ring Road; A38(M) Tame viaduct, West Midlands; A47 Blofield to North Burlingham, Norfolk; Evesham bridge maintenance, Worcestershire; A45 westbound bridge, Solihull, West Midlands; A18-A180 link, Lincolnshire. Meanwhile other projects such as the twin tube road tunnels to carry the A303 past the historic Stonehenge site have been repeatedly cancelled due to cost, despite the massive congestion and major safety issues for the existing link and the impossibility of building the widened road on the surface due to archaeological and environmental reasons.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • VIDEO: UN body protests England’s planned Stonehenge A303 tunnel
    May 1, 2018
    The Paris-based International Council on Monuments and Sites – Icomos- has objected to plans by Highways England for a road tunnel bedside the ancient monument Stonehenge. Icomos, which advises the United Nations on protection of world heritage sites, has written to Highways England urging a rethink of the planned tunnel that would be just under 3kmk long. It argues that the tunnel and the dualling of the A303 carriageways either side would damage the landscape and destroy archaeological evidence
  • Stonehenge tunnel controversy exacerbated by recent incident
    December 7, 2018
    The controversy surrounding the driving of a new road tunnel close to the UK’s Stonehenge monument has deepened following a recent incident. A 3m diameter hole was allegedly drilled through an important archeological find, a platform constructed of flint and animal bone, located close to the site Stonehenge. The platform is thought to have been erected some 6,000 years ago, making it older than Stonehenge itself, and preserves hoof prints made by aurochs, giant wild cattle that are now long extinct.
  • UK announces details of major road building programme
    December 1, 2014
    Details of a major programme of road building projects have been unveiled by the UK Government. The plan envisages some €18.83 billion (£15 billion) being spent on constructing new road links and upgrading existing routes. This is the largest single programme of works for the UK’s road network for several decades. The plan includes 100 major projects, perhaps the most notable being the long-awaited tunnel for the A303 past the Stonehenge archeological site. The existing route is narrow at this point and suf
  • Stonehenge Bypass approved in the UK
    November 13, 2020
    The UK Government has approved the construction of the Stonehenge Bypass.