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Road repairs ‘grind to a halt’ due to war-related sanctions Highland Council has claimed


By Alan Hendry

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Potholes trouble road users in various parts of the region.
Potholes trouble road users in various parts of the region.

Pothole repairs across the Highland Council area are grinding to a halt as a result of the UK’s trade sanctions against Russia, it has been claimed.

It is understood that all tarring and chipping work has had to be put on hold by the local authority because of a lack of bitumen – one of the products no longer being imported from Russia following its invasion of Ukraine.

“We had a big tarring programme and a chipping programme and everything has been stopped,” a source in the council roads department said.

“Even contractors can’t get tar – they are trying to source other stuff but they can’t do it.

“We can’t get bitumen, we can’t get cold tar... There’s absolutely nothing.

“So there will be no potholes or anything filled for the foreseeable future. Everything has ground to a halt.”

The source said workers had been given smaller tasks to keep them “ticking over”.

He pointed out that the whole local authority area would be affected.

“This will be the whole of the Highland Council. We were wondering why it hadn’t come out yet,” the source said.

“It was going to be potholes forever and a day and tarring forever and a day, but it has been hit on the head. The roads are just going to get worse and worse. That’s the truth.”

A Highland Council spokesman said: “Road surfacing materials (both permanent and temporary repair material) incorporate bitumen which is a petrochemical product.

“Given the current international issues, supplies of bitumen may be difficult to source.

“Highland Council is currently identifying the scale of any issue and also what mitigation measures may need to be implemented.”


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