Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Telegraph
The Telegraph
National
Will Bolton

Potholes are getting worse ... and now you can blame Vladimir Putin

Recent estimates suggest it would take around 10 years and £12 billion to bring all the road surfaces in the UK up to scratch - Joe Giddens /PA
Recent estimates suggest it would take around 10 years and £12 billion to bring all the road surfaces in the UK up to scratch - Joe Giddens /PA

Potholes are worsening as a result of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, according to a new analysis.

The Local Government Association (LGA), which represents more than 350 councils in England and Wales, said the rising cost in materials, driven by the conflict, was further delaying long overdue repairs to road surfaces.

The organisation revealed that many of its members had been hit by a 22 per cent rise in the cost of road maintenance since the conflict escalated in February 2022.

Before the invasion, around 60 per cent of bitumen - a material used to repair roads across the UK - was sourced from Russia.

Councils now have to ration the crucial resource and purchase it from other markets, pushing up costs and delaying road repairs.

Local authorities were already facing a significant backlog in road repairs.

Repairing UK's roads will take 10 years 

Recent estimates suggest it would take around 10 years and £12 billion to bring all the road surfaces in the UK up to scratch.

On top of the increase in price for materials, spiralling energy costs, made worse by the war in Ukraine, also mean there has been a 38 per cent increase in the bill for running and repairing street lights over the last six months.

Some authorities report that their costs in these areas have doubled. The LGA's analysis was based on a survey of its members and current prices.

David Renard, the organisation's transport spokesman, said: "As this stark new analysis shows, councils across the country are facing unprecedented increased costs to repair our local roads, keep our street lights switched on and invest in improved local infrastructure.

"Global pressures, such as Russia's invasion of Ukraine, as well as increasing inflation and a shortage of materials, have all provided the perfect storm for councils and piled pressure on already stretched local budgets.

"To tackle this issue, the new government must cover these increased costs for councils or risk road conditions getting worse or reductions in other services.

"Only with adequate long-term funding - to cover increased cost pressures and invest in local services - and the right powers, can councils deliver for our communities, tackle the climate emergency, and level up all parts of the country."

Steve Gooding, director of the RAC Foundation, said: "This analysis shows that alongside households, pubs and other businesses suffering from the dramatic hike in energy prices, local highway authorities are also feeling the pinch, made sharper by the consequences of the war in Ukraine.

"Patching potholes might pale into insignificance as a problem when compared to the devastation and human misery caused by President Putin's actions, but the funding squeeze on local spending will soon start to feel more real if authorities are going to struggle just to keep the street lights on.”

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.