Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 18
National Highways Reviews 15-Hour M25 Closure After 400m Oil Spill Resurfacing
Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 18

National Highways Reviews 15-Hour M25 Closure After 400m Oil Spill Resurfacing

3 articles · Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 18

Summary

  • National Highways said it will review its handling of the M25 incident after a crash near Lakeside at 05:30 BST kept part of the road shut until 20:40.
  • About 400 metres of carriageway had to be resurfaced after an oil spill, and 29C heat slowed cooling, extending disruption across Grays, Purfleet and the wider Thurrock area.
  • Eight to nine hours became typical waits for stranded drivers, including a 17-year-old on her first post-test drive and a civil servant who reached home at 23:00 after leaving at 13:30.
  • Motorists described running out of water, food and toilet access, while hundreds of cars packed Thurrock services and some travellers worried about missed gigs, babies' supplies and urgent medication.
  • The episode highlights how a single motorway crash can cascade into prolonged welfare and traffic problems, sharpening scrutiny of emergency response on one of Britain's busiest roads.

Insights

With thousands stranded without aid, does the M25 chaos reveal a critical flaw in national emergency response?
Is the 15-hour M25 gridlock a warning that Britain's roads are unprepared for a hotter future?