Road Repairs Made Priority By Transportation Ministry
Published: November 30, 2011 (Issue # 1685)
MOSCOW — The Transportation Ministry determined it needs to concentrate on repairing existing roads and constructing toll roads as it lacks funds for anything else.
Transportation costs account for 15 to 20 percent of production in Russia, as opposed to 7 to 8 percent in developed countries, and population mobility in Russia is half that of the developed countries. Only 8 percent of Russian roads are multi-lane, and almost a third of federal highways are overcrowded.
To solve these problems, 4 to 4.5 percent of gross domestic product has to be invested in the transportation system annually, instead of the current 2 to 2.2 percent, according to the ministry.
Since funds are limited, the ministry will concentrate on “not allowing further degradation of transportation infrastructure and developing the segment of the transportation system that enjoys effective demand,” the ministry said.
Under the program, 7.1 trillion rubles ($227.5 billion) from the federal budget will be spent on transportation in the next eight years.
1.7 trillion rubles will go to the repair and maintenance of federal highways, making that the largest part of the program budget.
The federal roads fund will contain 385 billion rubles in 2012, and there will be about 400 billion rubles in regional funds. That money can be spent on the construction of new roads, a Rosavtodor spokesman said, but the volume of funds is calculated on the basis of repair and maintenance projections.
In recent years, 35 to 42 percent of projected expenses have been provided, but full financing is expected to begin in 2014, the spokesman added.
Under the program, Rosavtodor will build 979 kilometers of federal roads and repair about 8,000 kilometers of road. The Avtodor state company will build more than 1,900 kilometers of roads.
That is an extremely small volume of construction. By comparison, China builds more than 5,000 kilometers of wide-lane highway per year, said Mikhail Blinkin, a transport expert and the scientific director at the Scientific Research Institute of Transportation and Road Maintenance.
In Russia, infrastructure will develop differently. Earlier this month, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said 46,000 villages do not have year-round access to roads and the government will pay 130 billion rubles to provide that access.
Blinkin said the program is right to admit that the government doesn’t have the money to build roads. It’s time to reject another myth as well — that private investors will build roads, he said, noting they are not doing so. Loans from government banks will instead.
The first section of the paid highway between Moscow and St. Petersburg is expected to cost about 60 billion rubles ($1.9 billion), 23 billion rubles of which will come from the investment fund, 29.2 billion rubles from Sberbank and VEB and 8 billion rubles will be invested by the concessionaire.