Skip to main content

PPRS speaker and MEP Cramer will urge more road maintenance

The chairman of the European Parliament’s transport committee wants an emphasis on road maintenance and finishing international connecting roads systems than on new grandiose highways. If national government’s fail to do this, as it’s their responsibility, then the European Union’s major cities can look forward to increasing gridlock in the coming decades. Congestion and maintenance are first and foremost the responsibility of member states and nobody wants to change this,” said Michael Cramer, chairm
February 3, 2015 Read time: 4 mins
The chairman of the European Parliament’s transport committee wants an emphasis on road maintenance and finishing international connecting roads systems than on new grandiose highways.

If national government’s fail to do this, as it’s their responsibility, then the 1116 European Union’s major cities can look forward to increasing gridlock in the coming decades.

Congestion and maintenance are first and foremost the responsibility of member states and nobody wants to change this,” said Michael Cramer, chairman of the transport committee.

“But the EU should use its policies and funds to support a sustainable infrastructure instead of a one-sided focus on new roads. Some incentives already go in the right direction, like the use of intelligent transport systems that help manage transport flows more efficiently…. The current framework still puts too much emphasis on building new infrastructure.”

His comments follow the publication in December of a Special Eurobarometer report looking at the quality of transport. A majority of respondents, 60%, considered congestion and maintenance, 59%, to be the most serious problems concerning roads in Europe.

Cramer, a European Parliament Member for Berlin, will be a keynote speaker at this month’s first Pavement Preservation & Recycling Summit in Paris that aims to highlight the need to properly maintain the transport infrastructure.

Cramer said European citizens already see that the policy of "more is better" is absolutely outdated. “Over the past decades, most politicians and administrations have been obsessed with building new infrastructure and neglected the maintenance and better use of existing roads. We have come to a point where we cannot ignore the negative effects anymore.”

He said roads and bridges have to be closed due to a lack of minimum maintenance. “One of the most prominent examples is the bridge crossing the Rhine near Cologne in Germany. Vehicles of more than 3.5 tonnes are not allowed any more to use it and will have to make detours for many years to come.”

Cramer said he wants politicians to adopt the frame of mind of "do better with what we have" in the coming year. “Maintenance and more efficient use of existing infrastructure must have absolute priority. And I am happy to see that both our citizens and the participants of the first Pavement Preservation & Recycling Summit share this belief.”

Michael Cramer, a member of the Green/Free European Alliance, will be speaking on the issue during his keynote address in the opening session of the PPRS event, from February 22-25.

Road users’ associations will also be present, as well key companies and government organisations involved in designing, building and maintaining road networks, not just in Europe, but globally. They’ll be engaged in discussions surrounding levels of service and financial committments required to address concerns of road quality, environmental impact and mobility issues.

Importantly, attendees will learn how, during these austere times, to put the business case forward to ensure more investment is there when and where it is needed.

“Insufficient maintenance has created a backlog and is affecting service levels,” said Jean-Francois Corte, secretary general of the World Road Association (PIARC), based in Paris.

“What’s needed right now is at least a medium-term vision to embrace the right type of maintenance, a strong strategy. Because there has been insufficient maintenance, road networks are degrading faster. Many highways authorities don’t have this medium- or long-term approach to highway maintenance because they are bound by their government’s annual budgets.”

A recent publication by PIARC, called The Importance of Road Maintenance, is available as a free download on the 3141 PIARC website.

To find out more about the three-day 7924 PPRS 2015 event and register, please visit the official PPRS website.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • PPRS in Nice – a focus on maintenance initiatives, says Eiffage chief
    March 9, 2018
    Road transport is an essential element of the mobility of people and the transport of goods. Thus, maintaining the road infrastructures in good condition and constantly adapting them to the needs of the public and businesses has become an imperative. “The upkeep and modernisation of road networks is an important part of Eiffage Group's business in France and abroad,” says Benoît de Ruffray, chief executive of Eiffage. “In recent years, we have witnessed a significant reduction in road maintenance budgets as
  • ERIC 2016: What shape the ‘Smart Road’?
    February 7, 2017
    Optimism about the future of highways worldwide abounded at the inaugural European Road Infrastructure Conference (ERIC) in Leeds, UK Around 500 delegates passed through the varied sessions during the three-day event at the Royal Armouries Museum in the northern English city of Leeds. They came away with many visions of what a motorway and road could look like. But what speakers at the event - co-organised by the Brussels-based European Union Road Federation (ERF) and the UK’s Road Safety Markings Ass
  • Australia bites the bullet on roads reform
    August 2, 2012
    Predictions of impending doom for Australia's roads infrastructure have given the nation's governments and roads stakeholders the fright they needed to collaborate on roads policy. If the latest initiatives Australia is putting in place do produce the full extent of the roads reform required, there will be some lessons there for the whole world Whether through pride or stubbornness, or a combination of both, each state and territory of Australia has always liked to do things its own way. To some extent and
  • Successful Eurobitume conference in Istanbul
    June 26, 2012
    The Eurasphalt & Eurobitume 2012 event in Turkey has attracted record attendance figures - Mike Woof reports A strong focus on sustainability has been the focus for the 5th Eurasphalt & Eurobitume Congress held in June 2012 at Turkey’s Istanbul Lutfi Kirdar Congress Centre. The conference had as its theme: Asphalt, the sustainable road to success and attracted the highest ever number of attendees for this four yearly event. In one of the opening presentations Turkey’s transport minister, Binali Yildirim, sp