Roads bearing brunt of loads
Thu, 17 September 2015 ppp
Zoe Holman
The
Ministry of Rural Development (MRD) this week held Cambodia’s first
national meeting on overloaded trucks on rural road networks, addressing
damage being caused to routes across the Kingdom by outsized cargo.
Officials
from the MRD and other departments yesterday convened with
representatives of trucking associations and international experts to
discuss measures to halt costs accruing to government, industry and
individuals from the misuse of some 14,000 kilometres of rural roads.
About
72 per cent of Cambodia’s roads are classified as rural and, according
to experts, habitual overloading of trucks and other modified vehicles
is taking a major toll on infrastructure.
”Heavy
traffic sooner or later causes fatigue cracks on the road, and when the
surface is cracked, water trickles down into unbound layers and weakens
the pavement,” said Anders Lundqvist, a consultant from Rural Roads
Asset Management who have been collaborating with authorities on the
issue.
As
Lundqvist explained, overloading by just 10 per cent doubles the rate
of wear and tear on roads. This generates exponentially higher
maintenance costs for the state budget, increased damage to vehicles and
more hazardous traffic conditions, thereby offsetting any profits to be
made from overloading.
“The
government has invested a lot in improving roads and transportation for
the benefit of everyone,” said Chan Darong, director general of
technical affairs at the MRD. “These practices [of overloading] are
having a big impact on people trying to reach their local schools,
hospitals and workplaces, so it is directly linked to promoting the
economy.”
To
tackle the issue, the MRD is rolling out a pilot project in Kampong
Speu and Siem Reap provinces implementing such initiatives as
weighing-stations, education campaigns, crackdowns on vehicle
modification and even a free public reporting hotline to turn in
violators.
Other
experts from the field have noted that the design and construction
quality of roads also has a bearing on their durability.
Daiuke
Fukuzawa of the Japanese International Cooperation Agency, which
supports the government’s overloading initiative, noted that Cambodia’s
rural roads were built to variable standards.
“We
only construct roads with asphalt which is more resilient,” he said.
“But it seems that many rural routes, especially those carrying trucks,
need to be held to higher construction and design standards, in
particular with respect to issues like paving, which of course, costs
more in time and money.”

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