The Trans-European Motorways (abbreviated "TEM") are a project of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe of sub-regional cooperation among Central, Eastern and South Eastern European countries regarding transport infrastructure.[1] The Trans-European Railway (abbreviated "TER") is the twin project for the railway.
Its members are Armenia, Austria (associate member), Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Georgia, Italy, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia and Turkey.[2]
The TEM Project was established in 1977 and it is still an active program planning for the future.[3]
Its main goal is to ease road transport in Europe, and to reduce differences between motorway networks.[4]
The TEM network contains more than 25,000 kilometers of roads. 65% of these roads have reached the full motorway standard.[4]
There is a coordinated master plan for the TEM and the TER.[5]
Citations
- ↑ "About the Trans-European Motorways (TEM) Project". UNECE. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
- ↑ TEM Brochure.
- ↑ TEM Strategic Plan.
- 1 2 TEM Safety.
- ↑ UNECE Master.
References
- Brochure on the Trans-European Motorways (TEM) Project, UNECE, June 2018, retrieved 2020-12-28
- TEM Project Strategic Plan 2017-2021, UNECE, February 2018, retrieved 2020-12-28
- Road Safety Audit and Road Safety Inspection on the TEM Network, UNECE, May 2018, retrieved 2020-12-28
- TEM and TER Master Plan, UNECE, retrieved 2020-12-28