He was born in
Râmnicu Vâlcea; his father was an aviator, and his mother, a nurse. After completing secondary studies there in 1972 at Vasile Roaită Theoretical High School (now Mircea cel Bătrân), He also took up
scale modeling; he has won prizes for his
ship and
aircraft models. After the
Romanian Revolution of 1989, Berceanu entered politics. He was Dolj County’s vice president of the Council of the
National Salvation Front in December 1989-January 1990. From February to May 1990, he was president of his county's
Provisional Council of National Unity and belonged to the main council in Bucharest. In 2005, he militated in favor of preserving the PD’s social-democratic orientation, losing out to a Christian Democratic faction. In the
May 1990 election, he won a seat in the chamber. He did so again in 1992, 1996 and 2000. While there, he served as the body's vice president at various times between 1992 and 2004. From his election in 2004 to April 2008, he sat in the Senate and was vice president there as well. and while gaining a seat as a county councillor was defeated on a 42–33.8 margin by a
Social Democratic candidate. At the
November 2008 parliamentary election, Berceanu regained his Senate seat and was named transport minister the following month. From October 2009, when the Social Democrats left the cabinet because of a political crisis, to that December, when a new cabinet was approved, he was also the acting agriculture minister. After re-assuming ministerial office in 2008, Berceanu announced
motorway construction as his priority (despite serious budget cuts brought about by the
2008 financial crisis), although acknowledging the poor state of national roads and the state railway
Căile Ferate Române (CFR), as well as the need to focus on airports (such as the
Braşov Airport currently under construction). He vowed to complete the
A2 motorway by 2011 (notwithstanding a 2006 promise to complete it by summer 2008), and a Bucharest-
Braşov motorway as well as a Bucharest-
Calafat one (ending at the
Calafat-Vidin Bridge) by 2014. This emphasis meant plans for twelve express roads had to be scrapped. Also planned by him is an hourly train from
Gara de Nord to
Otopeni, with a bus transfer to
the nearby airport. He has been a strong critic of his predecessor
Ludovic Orban, whom he accused of spending substantial amounts of money on studies for express roads, "not one metre" of which was built under Orban (and which, as a motorway advocate, he derided as being outdated). He has announced plans for major restructuring at the CFR, including a potential 12,000 layoffs, for which he again blamed the previous government. Orban fired back, labelling the 2009 transport budget a "cruel mockery" from an infrastructure development standpoint, accusing Berceanu of blocking the
Calafat-Vidin project and of "not lifting a finger" on the Craiova-
Piteşti express road, and stating his "personal feeling" that Berceanu's days as minister were numbered. He was dismissed a year and a half later, following a cabinet reshuffle. In April 2012, Berceanu announced his decision to retire from politics, and he did not run at the
December election. Berceanu's wealth has drawn attention: in 2008, his declared assets included bank accounts worth over
€800,000, three apartments (including one in Spain), a
Toyota RAV4 and a
Mercedes-Benz W220. In 2006, he made public his 300-page
Securitate file, revealing that the communist secret police agency had harassed and threatened him and his wife in the autumn of 1989 for allegedly intending to flee the country using a
hang glider he had built. He noted having given "about two ink cartridges' worth of declarations", that he was almost excluded from the
Romanian Communist Party in 1981, and that, despite being the first party member in his family, he was known for his anti-regime position and never informed on his colleagues. In 2000,
French President Jacques Chirac conferred the rank of
Chevalier of the
Ordre national du Mérite upon Berceanu. Within his party, he has been secretary, vice president for organisational affairs, and vice president. He has also served as a delegate from the Romanian Parliament to the
Council of Europe (1996–1998, 2000–2006, 2007–2008). ==Notes==