Cutting back on road spending may not be wise

In an article today, the Norwegian newspaper Dagbladet revealed that Statens Vegvesen (or the Norwegian Public Road Administration in English), which oversees the planning, construction and operation of the  national and county road networks, is going to make major cuts to their budget, thus halting or severely delaying major infrastructure projects.

To invest or not to invest

Although this may not have much impact and/or increase supply chain disruptions, it should be clear that improving roads standards is not just a traffic safety issue (which the article makes a big point of), but is also a major contributor towards reducing transportation costs and improving overall supply chain quality.

Transportation networks and roads in particular, are the main backbone of modern society, especially in Norway, which lacks the vast rail network that is seen in many European countries. Here, road transport IS the major component in moving goods and people from A to B. Both the sender, the recipient, the freight  hauler, or society at large, experience additional costs when goods or people cannot reach their destinations in time or in space, a fact often overlooked by the authorities in charge of building the infrastructure.



It should hence be paramount to increase, rather than cut back on road spending, and as already mentioned, this is not just a traffic safety issue, it is a simply a question of reliability, as one of my previous articles points out.

Simply cutting back on road spending in today’s transport-dependent society is not a good idea, and there are many reasons for that. I have mine.

Related

Posted in THIS and THAT
Tags: , , ,

ARTICLES and PAPERS
How to secure your supply chain - 2/7
Continuing my previous post, which talked about raising the awareness towards disruption risks in ge[...]
Supply chain vulnerability and resilience
Today's post is a review of a conference paper written by Francesco Longo and Tuncer Ören in 2008 an[...]
BOOKS and BOOK CHAPTERS
Book review: GIS for Transportation
Having been a student with Harvey Miller at the University of Utah 2000-2002 probably makes my revie[...]
Book Review: Supply Chain Risk Management
This excellent book by Donald Waters, Supply Chain Risk Management: Vulnerability and Resilience in [...]
REPORTS and WHITEPAPERS
ISO 28002 – Supply Chain Resilience
Have you heard of ISO 28002?  No? You should take note of this standard, because the ISO 28000 serie[...]
Will Climate Change have an impact on transportation?
Many studies have already examined the potential impacts of climate change on broad sectors of the e[...]