Reed NewsReed News

Supreme Court rejects road safety plan in Klarälvdalen

EnvironmentEnvironment
Supreme Court rejects road safety plan in Klarälvdalen
Key Points
  • The Supreme Court rejected a plan to secure a road against landslides in a protected area.
  • The Transport Administration warns of acute landslide risk but must reconsider its approach.
  • Options include reapplying for approval, potentially delaying construction until around 2030, or closing the road.

The Supreme Court has denied the Swedish Transport Administration's application to secure national road 62 against landslides in Klarälvdalen, Sweden. The court found no grounds to grant a review, making a previous ruling against the plan legally binding. The Transport Administration states there is an acute landslide risk along the road, but the area is strictly protected as a Natura 2000 zone under an EU decision.

Project leader Kenth Henriksson says the next steps are unclear, with options including starting a new application process, which could lead to construction around 2030, or closing the road. The administration conducts regular checks with equipment and drones but cannot provide continuous monitoring. A decision on the road's future is needed quickly due to the risk.

the next steps are unclear, with options including starting a new application process, which could lead to construction around 2030, or closing the road

Kenth Henriksson, Project leader

Transparency

How we verified this article

UnconfirmedBased on 1 sources
1 sources2 Involved