Today, the making
and upkeeping of roads is one of the country’s most continuous and
money-draining tasks. Driven by the ambition to connec
t
the various regions of the country with high quality motorable roads
the ministry of surface transport so far has laid down a 52010 km
length of national highways in the country distributed over various
states.
Motorable roads were built much after the period of the
popularization of the automobile both in Europe and in the United
States. The experimental version of it surfaced in Germany after
World War I in 1922 with the six-mile Ayus highway near Berlin. In
1924, in Rome, the first modern automobile-oriented road, the
autostrada, was opened to the use of fast traffic in the environs of
the city. Speed was assured through limited access.
In the 1930s, Germany began to build the Autobahns, free-flowing
roads with grade separations and limited access, allowing motorists
rapid departure from cities. Later Hitler saw great military value
in these roads and began to construct a network to reach all
Germany’s borders, though it was still incomplete in 1945. Only
after World War II did other European countries begin to copy these
quintessentially automotive roads.
The network of roads
was expanding abroad. Highways of four driving lanes,
grade-separations at route intersections, and channelised turns at
such intersections came in the ‘40s when limited access was
introduced.
In India, too, like
other parts of the world, the advent of the automobile found a
similarly primitive natural road system that has only over a full
century been brought up to the standard called for by automotive
travel. The Grand Trunk road by Sher Shah Suri was one of the only
few motorable roads in the country. However, Indian road making has
gone through a revolution in the last 40-50 years. Continuous
expansion, maintenance and improvement have been a part of this
revolution. Efforts are now been made to improve the existing
National Highways not only by strengthening and rehabilitation of
existing assets but also by constructing new roads and bridges over
missing links, improvement of low grade sections and widening to
4-lanes. The work of modernization of the system through
construction of some expressways is also in progress. Currently, in
the 9th Plan, the Ministry of Surface Transport outlines
a massive of job of nation building. It would decide the phased
removal of deficiencies in the existing NH network in tune with
traffic needs for 10-15 years with emphasis on high-density
corridors for four laning. It would bring in highway-user oriented
project planning in identifying package of project section-wise
rather than isolated stretches. Also, greater attention would be
given to the rehabilitation and reconstruction of dilapidated
bridges for the safety of the traffic. Along with the modernization
of road construction technology for speedy execution and quality
assurance, there would be continuous efforts in engineering measures
to improve road safety and conservation of energy. However, perhaps
the most noteworthy objective is integrating the development plans
with Railways and other modes of transport. North eastern region
would be the first to reck on with this objective.
Now, to be a little futuristic, India plans to experiment with
rubber roads. Or a step further, India might begin something on the
line of Canada’s all-weather road to the Arctic Ocean.
However, all these
ambitious planning falls back on funding support. Development work
on the National Highways is currently done through budgetary
support. To improve the position of availability of funds, steps are
being taken in this direction. Cess on petrol and diesel has been
levied to make funds available for Highway infrastructure
development. Funds are also obtained from externally funding
agencies like World Bank. Asian development Bank, OECF etc. for
projects in the Highway sector. Amendments have been made in the
National Highway Act to encourage private sector participation in
funding of road projects on BOT (Build-Operate and Transfer) basis.
The rich variety of traffic in Indian road personifies the ethnic
diversity of the country. People from all walks of life come
together and pursue their destination everyday.
A quiet meander of a
road, which starts its journey on the sultry sea board sometimes,
peters out beside a mountain meadow or dried-up expanse of
Rajasthan. How about imagining a journey on an Indian road where
there are a few petrol stations, a couple of temples, a traffic
light, and then suddenly nothing but the open prairie! Imagine a
blue sky which is lined with geese heading to their destination. All
around, the land is so flat and the light so cunning that it appears
to ripple like an ocean. Only the grazing cattle and the regular
geometry of power lines and telephone poles persuade the driver
otherwise.
However, these journeys through Indian roads begin to change rapidly
with the flood of new cars. The revolution of the road would repeat
the American experience. Rising levels of automobile ownership after
the war led to patterns of residential suburbs and outlying shopping
centres in the 1930s in America. This enlargement of the market for
cars caused major restructuring of automobile manufacturing, largely
ending the era of the special car for the wealthy.
The dominant role of
the automobile in Indian transportation has arisen despite a
transportation has arisen despite a transportation infrastructure
that is not at all conducive to such an outcome. However, this is
also subject to change in time to come.