- Dozens of Greek road projects have ground to a halt.
- Construction firms claim a 30% spike in asphalt and fuel costs makes work “impossible.”
- Contractors are demanding that the Greek government (and taxpayers) cover the price gap.
- Travelers should expect continued delays and “under construction” signs indefinitely.
Just as the travel season looms, Greece’s road construction industry has found a new favorite villain: the price of oil. Claiming that the cost of asphalt has surged by over 30%, major construction firms have officially hit the brakes on dozens of infrastructure projects across the country. It seems the “economic balance” of their contracts has been upset, providing a perfect reason for the excavators to stay silent.
Construction Giants Seek Taxpayer Rescue
The three largest construction firms in the country aren’t just stopping work; they are looking for a handout. In a joint letter to Infrastructure Minister Christos Dimas and Economy Minister Kyriakos Pierrakakis, these “struggling” giants are demanding an immediate legislative fix. Their request? A “retroactive compensation” scheme that would see the state foot the bill for the rising cost of asphalt and machinery fuel.
The “Unreplaceable” Material Excuse
Zacharias Athousakis, president of the Hellenic Association of Technical Companies, has labeled asphalt “irreplaceable.” While technically true, his insistence that current market data makes it “impossible” for firms to absorb costs sounds like a familiar refrain to those waiting for finished highways. According to the industry, without immediate government intervention, the “public interest”—and the financial stability of these massive firms—is at dire risk.
Future Outlook: More Cones, Less Road
The demand is simple: contractors want to be paid based on the “real value” of materials at the time of use, rather than the prices they originally agreed to. Until the state signs off on this open-ended billing, the Greek road network will likely remain a gallery of orange cones and “Work in Progress” signs that never seem to move.
The View from the Driver’s Seat (or the Traffic Jam)
While construction giants and ministers haggle over the price of bitumen, the actual victims are—as usual—the ones behind the wheel. For Greek residents, this “pause” means another year of navigating treacherous detours and pothole-riddled “temporary” lanes that have a funny way of becoming permanent. For the foreign tourists Argophilia serves, it’s a rude awakening to the “authentic” Greek experience: paying premium car rental rates and high toll fees only to be greeted by a sea of stationary orange cones and “Road Closed” signs that seem more like ancient monuments than active work sites. The “public interest” mentioned by contractors doesn’t include the sanity or safety of those trying to get from Athens to Patras.