Skip to main content

Nepal's highway plans

The Nepalese Government is working on plans to build a series of highways that will improve north-south connectivity for this mountainous country.
March 22, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Key infrastructure improvements are required in Nepal
The Nepalese Government is working on plans to build a series of highways that will improve north-south connectivity for this mountainous country.

A detailed project report (DPR) is underway and is due for completion in July, 2012. The new Karnali road will link Khulalu, Simikot and Hilsa and will be 286km long. The first phase of the Kaligandaki highway will link Gaindakot, Mirmi, Balubang and Phalebas in Parbat and will be 283km long, while its second phase will link Kusma, Phalebas, Setibeni and Mirmi and will be 98km long. The Koshi Corridor highway will pass through Basantapur in Terathum to Kimanthanka and will measure 195km long.

Preparation work was carried out during 2011 with work on the DPR also commencing. In all the planned roads will measure some 1,350km long and the Nepalese Government has already invested US$7.5 million in the DPR, although further funds will be required for the plans to be completed in detail. The various routes will present major engineering challenges however due to Nepal’s altitude and its complex geological conditions.

The scale of the work involved means that international funding sources are likely to be required to help Nepal develop the routes. The country's two large neighbours, China and India, have already provided funds for some of the infrastructure work carried out so far in Nepal and may well become involved in this programme also given the benefits to their own transport connections the plans could provide. The 2332 World Bank and the 943 Asian Development Bank could also be likely future sources of funds, although no announcements regarding financing have yet been released.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Nicaragua road project funding deal
    February 1, 2018
    Nicaragua’s Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure (MTI) is setting out its road development programme for 2018. In all the plans call for the construction of 171km of roads. Work will be completed for the road from Mulukuku to Siuna, with the first 23km stretch due to open in September 2018 and the remaining 21.5km expected in December 2018. Meanwhile the road from Nueva Guinea to San Francisco should be complete by November 2018. Work started on these two routes in 2016. The project also calls for
  • Bolivia’s new highway
    October 10, 2017
    Bolivia’s new highway will provide better access into mountain areas – Mauro Nogarin writes At the beginning of 2015, work began on the construction and paving for the Tupiza - Atocha - Uyuni highway project. The route is located in Bolivia’s Potosí department: it is 189m in length and forms part of the Southwest Basic Road Network (RVF) of Bolivia.
  • Georgia's Rikoti Pass upgrades to finish in 2023
    November 19, 2021
    Widening work on the E-60 highway into four lanes has been ongoing for several years.
  • Controversial Russian bridge opens
    August 10, 2018
    The first stage of a controversial Russian bridge project is now complete, with the link having been opened to use by cars and buses. The Kerch Strait bridge spans the Black Sea, connecting Russia’s Taman Peninsula in Krasnodar with Crimea, the latter having been controversially annexed by Russia from Ukraine in 2014. The official opening of the 19km-long bridge was carried out by Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, who drove across the link in a Russian-manufactured Kamaz truck to reach the city of Kerch.