Skip to main content

NSW Australia investing in transport

Australia’s New South Wales (NSW) Government has outlined its massive transportation investment in the WestConnex project. This will be the largest urban transport project in the history of New South Wales. Some A$1.8 billion will be invested over four years from Restart NSW, the state’s new infrastructure fund. to finance the WestConnex project. And A$111 million will be committed in 2013-14 to get work underway on the 33km motorway. The NSW Government will fund the initial sections of the motorway. Privat
June 20, 2013 Read time: 4 mins

Australia’s New South Wales (882 NSW) Government has outlined its massive transportation investment in the WestConnex project. This will be the largest urban transport project in the history of New South Wales. Some A$1.8 billion will be invested over four years from Restart NSW, the state’s new infrastructure fund. to finance the WestConnex project. And A$111 million will be committed in 2013-14 to get work underway on the 33km motorway. The NSW Government will fund the initial sections of the motorway. Private sector capital will be raised against tolls to fund the next phase of motorway construction. In its Budget papers, the Government notes that raising private capital once traffic volumes are known can significantly reduce traffic forecasting risk. In turn, this would reduce the required rate of return for private investors and lenders, and lower the project’s cost of capital or enable additional capital to be raised. The WestConnex project was the key recommendation of last year's Infrastructure NSW report into the State’s infrastructure needs. The project aims to ease congestion and improve travel times on the city’s major transport routes between Sydney’s west, south west and the Sydney Airport and Port Botany Precinct. The Sydney Motorways Project Office is currently finalising the business case to be delivered to the NSW Government in the coming weeks, which will detail the scope and the timing of phases. The Government says it will also engage with the private sector on the reference financing strategy and potential alternatives to ensure value-for-money financing of WestConnex.

In all, the NSW Government will invest A$5.1 billion to build and maintain critical road and maritime infrastructure across NSW in the 2013-2014 State Budget. This year’s roads budget provides A$2.6 billion for new roads infrastructure, A$1.5 billion for maintenance, A$238 million for road safety and A$62 million to ease Sydney’s congestion.

As part of the A$1 billion investment in the Pacific Highway, A$220 million has been allocated to continue work on the dual carriage, 17km upgrade of the highway between Tintenbar to Ewingsdale, north of Ballina. There is also A$180 million for the section between Frederickton and Eungai, north of Kempsey. To the south of the State, A$115 million has been allocated to continue work on the Princes Highway Gerringong upgrade between Mount Pleasant and Toolijooa Road.

The NSW Government will invest around A$2.7 billion of Restart NSW funds to growing and improving the state’s road network over the next four years, with A$553 million to be spent in 2013/14. The funding will support the WestConnex Motorway, WestConnex Enabling Works in the Port Botany and Sydney Airport Precinct, the Pacific and Princes highways, Bridges for the Bush, and addressing congestion pinch points in Sydney. The Budget also includes funding for the Stage 3 assessment of 891 Transurban's unsolicited F3 to M2 proposal, and reserves a Restart NSW contribution of up to A$400 million should the proposal pass the final hurdle.

Major commitments announced in the Budget include A$145 million to continue work on the dual carriageway upgrade of the Pacific Highway between Coffs Harbour (Sapphire) and Woolgoolga (State and Federal funded). They also include A$140 million to continue work on the dual carriageway upgrade of the Pacific Highway between Nambucca Heads and Urunga (State and Federal funded). For the Princes Highway, A$115 million will be for Mount Pleasant to Toolijooa Road as part of the Gerringong upgrade and A$19 million for the Foxground and Berry bypass. The Newell highway will benefit from A$5 million for overtaking lanes, while A$47 million will continue work on the four lane upgrade of the Great Western Highway between Station Street, Woodford and Ferguson Avenue, Hazelbrook (State and Federal funded). In Western Sydney, A$32 million will help to continue work on the upgrade of Camden Valley Way to four lanes between Ingleburn Road and Raby Road. And A$30 million will help to continue work on the upgrade of Camden Valley Way to four lanes between Bringelly Road and Ingleburn Road. Some A$222 million will help to complete work on the Hunter Expressway between the Pacific Motorway (F3) at Seahampton and the New England Highway at Branxton (State and Federal funded). There will be A$30 million to complete the Newcastle Inner Bypass between Shortland and Sandgate. Another A$165 million over four years will help to support Road Freight Safety and Productivity including Bridges for the Bush. And A$111 million will to start the WestConnex Motorway.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New highways for New South Wales
    May 28, 2012
    Work on the eastern section of the Hunter Expressway project in New South Wales in Australia will be carried out by Theiss. The firm won the deal for preliminary design and development of the US$736 million (A$825 million) project, which is for a 13.3km section of the link. Theiss is working on the project with Hyder Consulting and Parsons Brinkerhoff. Once the Hunter Expressway is complete in late 2013, it will cut travel times from the Hunter to Newcastle by 28 minutes.
  • New design for Sydney’s WestConnex motorway project third stage
    November 14, 2016
    Sydney’s proposed WestConnex motorway will be wider than planned to accommodate four instead of three lanes in each direction, according to media reports. The changes are part of a revamp of the third and final stage of the ambitious project in the capital city of Australia’s eastern New South Wales state. Some exit and entry ramps will also be scrapped but the overall cost of just under US$5.3 billion for the third stage remains unchanged, reported the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper. The projects
  • UGL wins Australia’s NorthConnex M&E services contract
    September 7, 2015
    Engineering services provider UGL has signed a four-year deal with the Lend Lease Bouygues joint venture that is building the NorthConnex motorway in Sydney, Australia. The US$329 million contract is for the design, procurement, construction and commissioning of the electrical, mechanical, communication, fire and control systems needed for the project’s 9km twinned tolled tunnel. UGL provides outsourced engineering, asset management and maintenance services to rail, transport, power, resources, water an
  • New South Wales road spending plan
    October 21, 2020
    New South Wales is setting outs its road spending plan.