A report from the House of Commons transport committee today says 鈥渢here has been a consistent theme of overly ambitious portfolio planning, and National Highways has overspent and underdelivered鈥.
Citing contentious projects such as the Stonehenge Tunnel and the Lower Thames Crossing, the MPs say that 鈥渟chemes have been consistently pushed back鈥. The Department for Transport and National Highways should aim lower, the report says, and not try to take so much on in each of the road investment strategy (RIS) regulatory periods.
Instead, they should focus on maintenance and renewal.
The report, , 聽says: 鈥淭he existing strategic road network (SRN) is ageing and requires significant renewal work in places, while many users want to see better day-to-day maintenance and upkeep of the network. Future investment should be focused on renewing older parts of the SRN and ensuring that resources are available to run the network in a way which better meets the needs of the drivers and industries that rely on it. The portfolios for RIS 3, RIS 4 and beyond should prioritise investment in the maintenance, renewal and resilience of existing assets over brand new projects.
鈥淧roviding the level of day-to-day running and upkeep that meets the needs of SRN users will require revenue funding alongside capital investment in more costly renewal and repair projects. The government must, therefore, make sufficient provision for both revenue and capital maintenance funds. This funding could be gained by cancelling complex, costly enhancement projects.鈥
It goes on to say: 鈥淭here has been a consistent theme of overly ambitious portfolio planning, and National Highways has overspent and underdelivered. Despite delays in RIS 1, an even more ambitious portfolio was chosen for RIS 2. Schemes have been consistently pushed back into the following RIS portfolio, and some projects initially planned for RIS 3 (2025鈥30) have already been pushed back to RIS 4. Rather than the efficiency and certainty which road periods were meant to introduce, this has led to confusion and uncertainty. While current inflationary costs were unexpected, changes to the smart motorways programme and legal challenges to projects on environmental grounds could have been better anticipated given longstanding criticism.鈥
Anti-roadbuilding lobby group Transport Action Network, which was among 55 organisations that submitted evidence to the committee, welcomed the MPs鈥 report.
Its director, Chris Todd, said: 鈥淭he committee鈥檚 call to consider 鈥榗ancelling complex, costly enhancement projects鈥 to free up funding for filling potholes will be welcomed by the public, however they travel. This must include local authority roads, which are in a terrible condition.
"In a week that has seen roads in northern England under water, while those in the Med are on fire, it鈥檚 time to recognise the need for more funding to protect existing transport networks from runaway climate change. The moment has come to bring National Highway鈥檚 plans for a future of ever bigger roads down to earth.鈥
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