Skip to main content

National Infrastructure Commission must focus on long-term planning, says CBI

The National Infrastructure Commission cannot afford to be way-laid by politics, but instead must focus on long-term planning to tackle the challenges the UK will face in coming decades, according to a new CBI paper. In Plotting the Course, the UK’s largest business group outlines eight key areas the Commission should prioritise, including: Delivering a secure, diverse low-carbon energy supply; Preparing for the roll-out of 5G mobile connectivity; Ensuring the impact of climate change is factored in when
February 29, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
The National Infrastructure Commission cannot afford to be way-laid by politics, but instead must focus on long-term planning to tackle the challenges the UK will face in coming decades, according to a new CBI paper.

In Plotting the Course, the UK’s largest business group outlines eight key areas the Commission should prioritise, including: Delivering a secure, diverse low-carbon energy supply; Preparing for the roll-out of 5G mobile connectivity; Ensuring the impact of climate change is factored in when planning water supplies and flood defences; Devising creative solutions to meet the future growing demand on the UK’s roads, rails and ports.

Rhian Kelly, CBI business environment director, said: “The National Infrastructure Commission gives the UK the perfect opportunity to carefully and strategically plot the course of its long-term infrastructure needs.

“It allows both Government and business to plan now for the challenges that the decades to come will bring, like the effects of climate change and increased demand on our infrastructure.

“With a strong Commission, we can deliver the projects – from upgrading our digital connectivity to boost productivity, to investing in new energy sources for a low-carbon economy – that will enable firms up and down the country to get on with growing our economy and creating jobs for the long-run.

“For this to happen though, it’s vital the Commission is not blown off course by politics. This independent body must be given strong teeth by politicians so that it can recommend significant infrastructure decisions, like building a new runway in the South East, are made for the future benefit of all.”

Related Content

  • November 25, 2020
    Virtual ITS European Congress 2020: report
    ITS industry ‘needs to make a move towards each other’, Congress delegates hear
  • February 27, 2012
    Road user charging environmentally necessary
    I like it when an otherwise unremarkable evening turns into something which stays in the mind awhile, and enlivened debate has that habit of planting seeds in the mind which over time grow into thinking with much wider application.
  • February 2, 2012
    Stop thinking and act on cooperative infrastructures
    OmniAir's Tim McGuckin looks at why metropolitan transportation networks might be the key to securing the long-term funding of cooperative infrastructure
  • March 20, 2018
    Be bold on ITS, says Dutch infrastructure minister
    The ITS industry must be bold if it is to succeed in helping to solve society’s mobility issues, according to a leading Dutch politician. “If we want to move forwards, we need brains – we also need the balls,” insisted Cora van Nieuwenhuizen, minister, infrastructure & water management. “No guts, no glory.” Investment was also required, she acknowledged, in order to help make transport more efficient, safe and sustainable. “The challenges we face are many,” she said at the official opening of Intertraffic