Skip to main content

Switzerland to invest €821.07mn more on congestion reduction

A further €821.07 million (CHF 1 billion) is to be spent on reducing traffic problems on Swiss roads, including the A4. The FORTA fund should be used to finance the expansion of the motorways between Meyrin and Vernier-Le Vengeron, Luterbach and Harkingen and Andelfingen and Winterthour. A further €32.83 million should be spent on work around Crissier, which already benefited from €98.51 million of the €1.14 billion allotted in the first phase of traffic jam reduction. The second €816.85 million phase is to
June 17, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
A further €821.07 million (CHF 1 billion) is to be spent on reducing traffic problems on Swiss roads, including the A4. The FORTA fund should be used to finance the expansion of the motorways between Meyrin and Vernier-Le Vengeron, Luterbach and Harkingen and Andelfingen and Winterthour. A further €32.83 million should be spent on work around Crissier, which already benefited from €98.51 million of the €1.14 billion allotted in the first phase of traffic jam reduction. The second €816.85 million phase is to be reviewed by the Council of States. The liberal greens have called for more spending on public transport and a mobility pricing strategy. Around €41.04 million has been reserved for the Geneva Airport-Le Vengeron road. The total costs of works could reach €4.51 billion. A further list of sites to use up the remaining €2.62 billion of funds has also been produced.

Meanwhile, Swiss pedestrian association Fussverkehr Schweiz has called for the state to give pedestrians higher priority in road construction projects. This includes aiming to lower traffic through lower speed limits or the construction of islands in the middle of pedestrian crossings. Routes used by children to get to school should be renovated, according to the association, as some 400 children are injured on their way to school each year, of which 80 sustain serious injuries and an average of two children die each year while walking to school.

Related Content

  • Estonia, Ireland rapid reduction in road deaths
    February 15, 2012
    Estonia and Ireland's 2010 Road Safety PIN Awards followed wide-ranging efforts to reduce road deaths. In Estonia, road mortality has been halved from 146 deaths per million inhabitants in 2001 to 75 in 2009 (although still above the EU27 average of 70).
  • EU missing target of halving road deaths by 2020, says ETSC
    April 12, 2018
    Halving the number of deaths on Europe’s roads by 2020 is not likely to be achieved, according to the European Transport Safety Council. The 28 members of the European Union reduced the number of road deaths by 20% from 2010-2017, far less than the 38% cut needed to stay on course to meet the 2020 target. The European Commission has just published data showing that deaths on EU roads fell by only 2% last year, following a similar decrease in 2016 and a 1% increase in 2015. “For four years in a row, the
  • Safer roads for UK?
    February 29, 2012
    A major campaign is commencing in the UK with the laudable aim of reducing road fatality rates.
  • Road deaths: 'something must change' - GHSA
    March 4, 2024
    The ‘grim and tragic milestone' of a total four million deaths in the US requires renewed road safety action, says the Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA).