Skip to main content

Polish road dispute

A string of legal and political battles look likely in the aftermath of a broken highway contract in Poland.
February 28, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A string of legal and political battles look likely in the aftermath of a broken highway contract in Poland. A Chinese led consortium headed by China Overseas Engineering Group (2487 COVEC) had been working on a contract for a 50km section of the A2 highway between Lodz and capital Warsaw. The initial award of the contract to COVEC was highly controversial with accusations from other firms tendering for the work that they were unable to compete with the extremely low bid offered by the consortium.

However, COVEC has now broken the original contract agreed with the Polish General Directorate for National Roads and Motorways (1361 GDDKiA). COVEC said it pulled out of the project due to a dispute with GDDKiA over payment deadlines and the unexpected increase in costs for materials.

An official response from GDDKiA has yet to be received. Disputes concerning payments to subcontractors by COVEC are also in hand. It is thought that GDDKiA has been carrying out talks with COVEC over possibly resuming the construction work but under different terms than before, with changes to allow for factors such as the increase in materials prices. It remains to be seen whether GDDKiA will award contracts for portions of the project to firms that submitted tenders in the initial bidding round, which would also allow construction work to recommence. The road does have to be complete for the Euro 2012 football event and GDDKiA is working within a tight schedule to ensure that the section of the A2 between Lodz and Warsaw will be open to traffic in time.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Polish tenders worth €4.6 billion to be announced in 2019
    January 11, 2019
    Poland’s General Directorate for National Roads and Motorways (GDDKiA) will announce tenders worth around €4.64 billion for construction of around 435km of roads this year. Included will be 172km of the S19 expressway in Podlaskie and Podkarpackie, a 60km stretch of the S7 expressway in Mazowsze and Malopolskie and a 50km section of the S11 expressway in Zachodniopomorskie. Late last year, a Polish parliamentary commission said that it had heard that €11.14 billion of road investment within the 2014-2
  • Polish projects pushing ahead
    October 6, 2016
    Key road projects in Poland look set to move forward. A tender process will commence shortly for a project in Lodz. Poland’s road authority, GDDKiA, will start the Western ring-road tender process. Poland's Infrastructure Ministry will give the go-ahead. The project involves building under 29km of the S14 dual carriageway to complete the circle around Lodz. The project is expected to be worth close to €392 million in all. The first stage runs from the Lodz Lublinek junction to the Lodz Teofilow junction and
  • New Polish highway projects are being planned
    August 11, 2014
    Plans are moving forward for two key highway projects in Poland. The Polish General Directorate for National Roads and Motorways (GDDKiA) says that the best offer for the construction of the Rzeszow - Jaroslaw section of the A4 highway has been submitted by a consortium comprising contractors Budimex and Strabag. The deal is worth some €170.63 million. Meanwhile Italian construction company Astaldi has signed a contract worth €103.23 million with GDDKiA for the S8 dual carriageway. The section of road will
  • Kazakhstan’s London road show woos consortia for Almaty ring road
    March 2, 2015
    Kazak and EBRD officials visited London to highlight the possibility of a public-private partnership under the country’s revised PPP legal framework. David Arminas reports. To build a road, you go on the road, and that is what Kazakhstan did in London in mid-December. Representatives of more than 100 organisations, a mix of construction companies and financial institutions, attended the roadshow-style presentation to attract foreign capital for BAKAD, the Almaty Ring Road Concession. The message was that Ka