Skip to main content

Libyan highway deal for Italian team?

An Italian consortium looks to be a front runner for a major highway project in Libya.
March 5, 2012 Read time: 1 min
An Italian consortium looks to be a front runner for a major highway project in Libya. The highway would connect Libya with its neighbours Tunisia and Egypt. The consortium includes Italian firms 3611 Saipem (which heads the partnership), Maltauro, Maire Tecnimont and Rizzani de Echer. The value of the project has not so far been released but given the length of the highway that will be required to connect Tunisia and Egypt through Libya it is likely to be a multi-billion US$ deal. This development follows the announcement of further agreements between the Italian and Libyan leaders over planned highway construction projects.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Jacobs and CH2M to merge in a US$3.27 deal
    August 3, 2017
    Global US infrastructure firm Jacobs Engineering Group and one of its main rivals, CH2M, are to merge under a US$3.27 billion deal. In a written statement, Jacobs said it will acquire all of the outstanding shares of CH2M in a cash and stock transaction, including around $416 million of CH2M debt. CH2M had global revenue in the past 12 months of around $4.4 billion and about 20,000 employees. Its contracts are in the water, transportation, environmental and nuclear sectors.
  • Colombia: nine 4G PPPs to receive financing this year
    March 18, 2016
    Colombia’s minister of transport Natalia Abello Vives has announced that nine 4G public private partnership projects will receive financing this year. Final financing for the Puerta de Hierro-Cruz del Visola road, part of the second wave of 4G projects, will be on June 14, with work to be carried out by Spanish construction firm Sacyr. Construcciones El Condor will carry out the Antioquia-Bolivar and Cesar-Guajira road projects which will also receive financing this year. Other projects include the
  • “Record” cash for filling English potholes
    March 25, 2025
    The transport secretary also unveiled funding for 2025-26 for National Highways, the English road agency, to deliver critical road schemes and maintain motorways and critical major A-roads.
  • Seittsa set to take on management of bankrupt Spanish motorways
    July 31, 2017
    The Spanish government has given the green light for the state-owned transport infrastructure firm Seittsa to manage nine bankrupt toll motorways. The deal is for Seittsa to prepare the terms for their retender to private companies by the end of next year. Spanish media report that the cost is set to be lower than the €3.5 billion previously estimated by some analysts. The arrangement comes after three years of failed attempts by the government to step in and facilitate debt restructuring between the invest