What will tomorrow’s roads look like? Will lanes be narrower, will the road charge vehicles as they drive on them, will they collect data, will they be self-cleaning and de-polluting? All these questions and more were pondered at a two-day conference in Berlin, entitled ‘Preparing the asphalt industry for the future’. It was the first such event for 
“We are seeing a lot of change in the market and the working environment,” said Siobhan Mckelvey, Eurobitume president and chair of the organising committee for the event. “And we need to be more open and connected to a wider part of our audience.”
There are two big and interdependent challenges for the European asphalt industry. The sector must understand and work with the opportunities and threats that the digital age brings, while attracting new talent.
“We are facing a great revolution,” said Guillaume Bastien, commercial and business development director for 
Fewer car owners
One of the difficulties in preparing for the future is that no one knows what the future will look like. Bastien made the point that vehicle manufacturers are pushing forward without any involvement with, or interest in, the asphalt industry. As a result, road researchers are looking at a number of ‘what if’ scenarios.
Nicolas Hautiere, deputy director of IFFSTAR, the French Institute of Science and Technology for Transport, Development and Networks, spoke about the I-Street programme which will see over €15 million invested in a series of demonstration projects in Nantes, Toulouse, Lyon and Champs-sur-Marne. Subjects under investigation include greener roads, instrumented and connected roads, prefabricated and removable roads and new markings.
Despite the uncertainty, one trend is widely predicted: car ownership will decrease. Arash Khojinian, pavement materials team leader at 
There are implications for a future where people pay to use vehicles as  required, rather than owning them. Gergely Raccuja, a strategic  consultant at 
Raccuja, who won  the 2017 Wolfson Economic Prize with his idea, ‘Miles Better’, suggests  that tax should be applied to individual vehicles and should reflect the  distance each vehicle drives. Price/distance will depend on the weight  and polluting power of a vehicle.
“With  shared vehicles, there may be a lot less vehicles driving more miles,  so it’s important that we look at that and that we reinvest based on  that,” Raccuja told the conference. He also pointed out that, with a  switch to electric and hybrid vehicles, taxes levied on fuel will  reduce.
Raccuja’s scheme,  developed in conjunction with motoring organisation the 
Miles  Better also requires that money from the taxes collected is ring-fenced  for road repair. “It should be guaranteed that a proportion of my taxes  will be reinvested into road maintenance,” said Raccuja. 
Raccuja  was speaking in a section of the conference that looked at financing  solutions for roads, alongside Thomas Bayerl, who runs the  infrastructure debt team for the asset management part of insurer Munich  Re. Bayerl told the conference how attractive the infrastructure sector  is for insurance companies.
“We  like infrastructure project finance because it gives us predictable and  stable cash flows,” he said. “Institutional investors are still fairly  new to this topic. What we try to do is work in partnerships with market  participants in order to develop our portfolio further and match our  liabilities better.”
In  the sustainability session, the conference heard from a transport  researcher about reducing the carbon dioxide produced by freight  vehicles. Tim Breemersch, senior researcher at Transport & Mobility  Leuven in Belgium explained that the issue must be tackled on multiple  fronts simultaneously: improving energy efficiency, better aerodynamics,  lower rolling resistance, better hybrid and electrification technology  and improved logistics.
Bjarne  Schmidt, a senior consultant at Teknologisk Intitut in Denmark, spoke  about ongoing research to improve the rolling resistance of pavements,  including finding more effective ways to measure rolling resistance.
Mats  Wendel, innovation strategist at 
     
Reinhold   Ruhl, chair of the German Bitumen Forum, spoke about the challenges of   setting up a programme of medical checks on road workers, which the   forum is doing in order to set reasonable OELs. Cosmin Patrascu of INRS,   the French National Research and Safety Institute for the Prevention  of  Occupational Accidents and Diseases spoke about a project to create   standards related to inhaling fumes from asphalt mixes and contact with   skin.
David Giles,   representing Eurobitume UK, talked about a scheme which has been running   since 2003 where drivers of bitumen tankers report accidents or   problems with bitumen storage and dispensing equipment. Through analysis   of the data, Eurobitume and the 
Leopold   Tzeuton, general manager of ATPH, the French Association for  Prevention  in Hydrocarbon Transport presented about his organisation’s  training  track for tank truck drivers, the only one in Europe.
Why aren’t we innovating?
A   challenging session looked at the topic of new technology and asked  why  the road building industry is not adopting it more readily. There  were a  few different reasons proposed by various speakers.
Rudi   Bull-Wasser, head of section, asphalt pavements at Germany’s Federal   Highway Research Institute was speaking from the client’s perspective.   He highlighted challenges due to clients being risk-averse and a culture   where failures are not accepted and a lowest-price-wins procurement   environment.
Sergei   Miller, asphalt researcher at TU-Twente in the Netherlands, said that   the industry has the knowledge and tools needed to improve quality:   ensuring temperature homogeneity and compaction consistency.
“The   asphalt industry mainly operates based on condition and custom,” he   said. “That’s quite dangerous in terms of blocking innovation.” Miller   recounted that he visits many construction sites and often observes that   technology such as intelligent compaction systems are switched off.
However,   the technology is out there. Miller believes that savvy contractors  can  benefit from off-the-shelf solutions such as infrared cameras that   would allow them to do a better job. “Off-the-shelf systems are going  to  be challenging the machine manufacturers,” he predicted.
     
Another    barrier to innovation is the demographics of the road industry. Like    the construction industry in general, road building firms and  suppliers   in Europe and around the world are struggling to attract new  talent,   with many young people being drawn to high-tech industries.
How    to attract new recruits presents another challenge. The conference is    part of E&E’s strategy, because it aims to help the industry to    communicate the value it brings to society and the environment, rather    than just focussing on technical issues and research.
As    Gergeley Raccuja’s presentation demonstrated – he graduated in 2015  -    younger people do come up with alternative ideas. The challenge for    established players is to be open to new ideas, rather than to    immediately knock them down.