A £13.3 million road improvement scheme on the M181 in Lincolnshire has been given the green light.
Andrew Jones has been re-appointed as Transport Minister by Prime Minister Theresa May following her government reshuffle.
The government has announced £30 million worth of funding to support low emission bus technologies across England.
Transport Secretary Chris Grayling says he has “no plans to back away from the HS2 project"
Chris Grayling has been named the new Transport Secretary by Prime Minister Theresa May.
From September 2016, new MOT testers will need a nationally-recognised qualification.
Funding is available for projects that reduce emissions in the freight, logistics, utilities and emergency industries.
An additional £30 million of government funding has been announced to help support research and development into connected and autonomous vehicle technologies in the UK.
The newly proposed route would cut journey times on services heading to Leeds, York and Newcastle, and would also reduce the cost of the project by around £1billion.
A new lorry area will be created in Stanford West as a solution to Operation Stack, a procedure of parking lorries on the M20 when there is disruption to cross channel services.
Councils are invited to apply for a share of £60 million of new funding to encourage walking and cycling.
The first of a fleet of state-of-the-art new trains has been unveiled by Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin.
West Yorkshire Combined Authority’s CityConnect team has developed a new safe and segregated nine mile cycle superhighway.
The Transport Select Committee (TSC) has called on the government to scrap its plans to convert more hard shoulders into permanent driving lanes.
As part of Rail Week, South West Trains and Network Rail have revealed plans to invite the public along to events at London Waterloo and Portsmouth & Southsea stations, in a bid to get more young people to consider a career in the rail industry.
The Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport (CILT) has predicted that paper train tickets are set to become a thing of the past within eight years, as plans continue to set in motion a system where rail passengers use their smartphone or bank card to travel instead.