Skip to main content

Brazilian bridge and highway project tenders

A series of major project tenders are opening in Brazil. The Brazilian Government has announced five new road tenders to be launched in 2014. The highway sections run for a total distance of some 2,625km. This programme of works will lengthen the country’s highway network by some 2,282km, with the work costing an impressive US$7.39 billion in all.
April 7, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
A series of major project tenders are opening in Brazil. The Brazilian Government has announced five new road tenders to be launched in 2014.

The highway sections run for a Total distance of some 2,625km. This programme of works will lengthen the country’s highway network by some 2,282km, with the work costing an impressive US$7.39 billion in all. The roads include the BR-163, BR-364 and BR-153 in the Central West region, and the BR-476 stretch in the South, in addition to the Rio-Niteroi Bridge in Rio de Janeiro.

The road concession packages will be for 30 years. The tenders are expected to take place in the second half of 2014. Many of the new highway sections will help develop Brazil’s grain industry, improving transport and logistics. The new road connections will save an estimated $913 million/year on transport from 2020 and relieve the pressure on the Santos, São Paulo and Paranagua ports.

The majority of the expansion work will be carried out in the first five years of the contracts being awarded. Meanwhile in São Paulo, a tender is being called by state highway company 2529 Dersa for the consultancy for the economic financing phase of the Santos-Guarujá tunnel. The project looks likely to cost some $783 million, according to a report by Business News Americas.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Brazil weighs its WIM options
    July 21, 2021
    Recent legislation in Brazil is allowing greater use of weigh-in-motion technology, all in an attempt to address some familiar challenges, writes Intercomp's Jon Arnold.
  • Peru highway concessions face lengthy delays
    January 12, 2015
    Red tape and bureaucracy are to blame for delays to Peru’s highway concessions. Infrastructure association Afin cites these as the reasons the majority of Peru’s highway concessions have been held up, by as much as 10 years in certain instances. Business News Americas reports that so far, only 15% of Peru's 78,000km road network, around 12,445km, is paved according to Afin. The country has a particular need to revamp three major highways according to Afin: the 2,600km Pan- American highway, the 3,500km And
  • Kenya rehabilitates, widens, tolls Northern Corridor
    November 8, 2017
    A massive highway project in Kenya will boost transport for the country as well as its neighbours - Shem Oirere reports. Kenya has commenced the process of rehabilitating, expanding and tolling of 657km of East Africa’s Northern Corridor that is anchored on the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa and which links the gateway with landlocked countries of Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and parts of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
  • Bauma and Sobratema join forces in Brazil
    March 9, 2017
    Sobratema - which represents Brazilian contractors and manufacturers – announced a new partnership with bauma at CONEXPO/CON-AGG. The expansion by bauma into Brazil comes as the country’s beleaguered economy is starting to show signs of recovery. Sobratema’s vice president Juan Manuel Altstadt presented graphs to journalists and industry representatives which demonstrated the upturn.