RHA sounds alarm over M4 toll road plans
13 August 2008
Chris Tindall
- Commercial Motor
Plans for an M4 toll relief road would
cripple haulage businesses delivering into Wales
and seriously damage the economy, warns the
Road Haulage Association (RHA). The Welsh
Assembly is currently considering the case for a
toll motorway, similar to the M6 toll road in
the Midlands, for motorists travelling between
London, Cardiff
and Swansea, and says no firm decision will be
made until after environmental surveys have been
carried out.
Critics such as the Friends of the Earth have
already waded into the debate, arguing that
widening the M4 would be a cheaper, more
efficient alternative. However, RHA regional
director Mike Farmer says there will always be
environmental objections to new road-building
plans. It is in favour of a relief road, but
actively opposes putting a toll on it.
"The M4 is the main artery into South Wales
and it's not fit for purpose," explains Farmer.
"It clags up each and every day. Lorries are
already paying £15.90 to go over the river, and
then to be hit by a toll would do the Welsh
economy no power of good. It would also be more
than a normal chap could bear."
Farmer suggests a private company builds the
road and then the Government repays it back over
a period of time, based on traffic counts on the
new road, or "shadow tolling" as it is known.
But he says lessons must be learnt from the M6 toll
road, which hauliers have snubbed due to time
savings of less than 20 minutes being achieved:
"£11 for 17 minutes doesn't stack up
economically," he explains.
Pembrokeshire-based Frenni Transport says it
would rather see the M4 widened than have
another toll road: "We are being held up by a
small, but significant amount of time," explains
director Matthew Parry. "But with a toll road
you are back in the same boat you are either
paying for a toll or paying to wait a little bit
longer.
"I can see exactly where the environmental
groups are coming from, it's crazy having new
roads going through the country again." Neil
Crumpton, Friends of the Earth's transport
campaigner says: "The problem of peak-time
congestion on the M4 could be solved by turning
its two-lane bottlenecks into three lanes, so
the motorway is three lanes for its entire
length."
A Welsh Assembly spokesman says that if the
Government does decide to press ahead with a new
road, there will be a public inquiry, and
haulage operators will have an opportunity to
comment.