![]() ![]() ![]() The Roadmap builds on the progress we have made since the launch of TIP in 2017, and the landmark publication of the National Infrastructure Strategy in November 2020 and the 25 Year Environment Plan in 2018. Achieving that vision requires a system for designing, constructing and operating in the built environment that is more resilient, adaptive and sustainable, and that can better withstand the inevitable shifts and changes we will see in the coming decades. TIP’s Roadmap to 2030 describes a vision for the future in which we collectively prioritise the societal outcomes we need, and use modern digital approaches and technologies, alongside improved delivery models to achieve them. Its purpose is to transform how the government and industry decide to intervene in the built environment, to drive a step change in infrastructure performance. Transforming Infrastructure Performance (TIP) is the IPA’s flagship programme to lead system change in the built environment. The Government must now capitalise on this renewed appetite for reform, to lay firm foundations for UK infrastructure delivery well into the 21st century. In developing this roadmap, we have been struck by the generosity of our partners and the collective commitment to change across government, industry and academia. And we want our industry partners to bring forward innovative solutions that accelerate progress, to consistently deploy new technologies to improve project performance and to invest in the skills and training that will build our future workforce. We want government departments and their delivery bodies to think robustly about how they are translating intended outcomes into delivery. ![]() Its objectives and challenges are clear, and it falls to all of us now to step up and deliver. The Transforming Infrastructure Performance programme is central to this process of change. But for its part, government must rewire its decision making and other processes in order to embed respect for nature, better data sharing, greater safety and security for our society and a more effective long-term partnership with the private and voluntary sectors. The Government is confident in the ability and ingenuity of the people and businesses of the UK to rise to them. We know the scale of the challenges we face moving the UK to a net zero economy alone is a gigantic undertaking that has never been done before. Such infrastructure is critical if the Government is to achieve its long term ambitions for people and businesses across the United Kingdom: ambitions to level up across the country, strengthen the Union, meet the UN Sustainable Development Goals and put the UK on the path to net zero emissions by 2050. The National Infrastructure and Construction Pipeline published today forecasts £650bn investment in infrastructure over the coming decade. High quality, sustainable, resilient infrastructure is central to this government’s vision for the future of the UK, as set out in the National Infrastructure Strategy and the Plan for Growth. Ministerial Foreword - Lord Agnew and Financial Secretary to the Treasury UK Infrastructure Bank: established in 2021 to provide finance for local and private infrastructure projectsġ.IPA: drives best practice and innovation in infrastructure delivery.HM Treasury: makes strategic decisions on infrastructure policy and spending.National Infrastructure Commission: established in 2015 to provide independent expert advice on the UK’s long-term infrastructure needs.We sit at the heart of government, reporting to the Cabinet Office and HM Treasury, and form a key part of the UK’s infrastructure ecosystem: The Infrastructure & Projects Authority (IPA) is the government’s centre of expertise for infrastructure and major projects. It is essential that we focus on the outcomes that we need for people and nature when we are choosing where and how to intervene in this complex system. Infrastructure connects us to each other and the natural environment, and is the foundation for the services that we depend on. ![]()
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