Skip to main content

France earmarks €5bn for road works up to 2022

France will invest €5.1 billion in maintenance and construction of highways up to 2022 as part of a major transportation strategy. The money for highways is within €13.4 billion that the government pledged to invest in the general transportation sector. More than half of the money will be for railways. In September, the French government outlined its infrastructure spending priorities for the decade to 2028. The government is to prioritise investment at key rail hubs outside Paris. Half the total €13.4
September 28, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Who gets what

France will invest €5.1 billion in maintenance and construction of highways up to 2022 as part of a major transportation strategy.

The money for highways is within €13.4 billion that the government pledged to invest in the general transportation sector. More than half of the money will be for railways.

In September, the French government outlined its infrastructure spending priorities for the decade to 2028. The government is to prioritise investment at key rail hubs outside Paris. Half the total €13.4 billion will be dedicated to rail spending which is to be focused on the everyday needs of users.

The government has set a target of doubling rail’s modal share “for daily journeys in and around the largest urban centres”, it said. While its core focus is ‘everyday transport’, the government is not turning its back on ‘major new rail infrastructure projects between cities’.

In May, France announced that it would boost its annual national-road modernisation fund by 25% to €1 billion starting next year.

French Transport Minister Élisabeth Borne, who made the announcement, said starting in 2022, roads will be reviewed every five years under a new scoring system to determine which are in most need of repairs and modernisation. A focus will be on roads serving mid-sized cities.

But the plan is meant for trunk national roads directly managed by the government and not on departmental roads which are managed at local and regional level.

At the start of this year, French media reported that the government would cut the speed limit on two-lane highways to 80kph from 90kph. The move is part of an effort to reduce road deaths which reached nearly 3,500 in 2016.
Just over half of the deaths happened on the 400,000km of two-lane secondary roads which lack a separating guardrail.

Related Content

  • Wrong time to end right turns?
    March 15, 2024
    Banning right-hand turns after stopping for a red light is gaining momentum in the US. But debate continues about whether it will result in fewer incidents between vehicles and alternative mobility users. David Arminas reports.
  • AfPA alarmed over Australia’s new funding split
    November 17, 2023
    The Australian Flexible Pavement Association says the federal government’s plan for a 50:50 split with states and territories is highly “controversial” and comes amid major road and rail project cancellations.
  • Putin orders doubling road-building in Russia by 2022
    November 21, 2014
    Russia looks set to accelerate its road building programme – Eugene Gerden writes The volume of road building in Russia should be doubled by 2022, according to a recent order of Russia’s president Vladimir Putin. He said, “We need a real breakthrough in road building during the next several years. These volumes should be doubled during the coming decade.”
  • UK’s IMechE calls for a Clean Air Act
    June 15, 2018
    The UK needs extensive monitoring of current transport emissions in order to set realistic pollution reduction targets, according to an engineering umbrella organisation. The Institution of Mechanical Engineers is calling for a major Clean Air Act to counter what it believes is a deadly rise in air pollution along the countries' transportation corridors, both road and rail. “Individuals breathe in 20kg of air every day and because we can’t see it, we don’t know about the harmful particles it contains,” sai