Skip to main content

China supplies road funding to Sri Lanka

Chinese financing will be used to pay for new road links in Sri Lanka. The China Development Bank is providing sources to funds of up to US$500 million that will pay for key road upgrades in Sri Lanka.
February 14, 2012 Read time: 1 min
Chinese financing will be used to pay for new road links in Sri Lanka. The 2621 China Development Bank is providing sources to funds of up to US$500 million that will pay for key road upgrades in Sri Lanka. Projects already under the spotlight include the construction of a 17.5km road project and a 47km road project. These new roads will help improve transport links to Sri Lanka's low-grown tea sector, which forms a key part of the country's economy. The 17.5km road project will link Pitigala and Horawal and will run through Pelawatta, while the 47km road will connect the Southern and Western provinces, passing through Morawaka, Neluwa and Pelawatta. The Chinese investment is of note as it reveals how the country is investing in other Asian nations. Sri Lanka does have a considerable need for infrastructure development in the wake of the civil war that raged for many years through the country.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Paying for the roads we drive
    February 6, 2018
    All around the world, vehicle numbers are growing fast and existing roads are seeing increasing congestion. This rapid increase in vehicle ownership is particularly acute in the developing world. Reductions in actual vehicle purchase costs have resulted in an explosion in vehicle numbers using the roads. In the past, governments were able to fund road expansion programmes from their own sources. The most ambitious of these came when the US Government commenced construction of the Interstate system in 1956,
  • Black sea countries complete preparations for implementation of Black Sea Ring project
    August 23, 2016
    The Black Sea Ring Road project will improve transport connections for the region - Eugene Gerden writes. Russia has officially started implementation of a project, known as the Black Sea Ring Road, which involves building a four-lane highway system connecting the countries surrounding the Black Sea. The Black Sea Ring Road is a substantial project, a highway measuring some 7,140km in all. Among the countries participating in the project are Turkey, Georgia, Russia, Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Greece and
  • Kiribati sees road infrastructure upgrade
    March 2, 2016
    Kiribati is benefiting from major improvements to its road infrastructure. Funding for the road development programme has been provided jointly by the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), and the Australian Government. The improved road network on South Tarawa will help boost safety and economic development. The road is a vital shared communal asset for 50,000 people, the entire population of South Tarawa, as it is the lone vehicular transport route on the atoll. The project is seeing the upgrade o
  • Europe-Asia road link
    February 9, 2017
    The governments of China, Kazakhstan, Belarus and Russia have finally approved a project for the building of a new transcontinental road, which will connect Asia and Europe. The new route is much-needed and will speed the transportation of cargo between the two continents, according to Maxim Sokolov, Russia’s Minister of Transport. The idea for the building of the road was first proposed by the European Commission around 2005. It was prompted by the ever growing volume of trade between the EU and Chin