Skip to main content

Slovakia’s troubled D1 highway

Slovakia’s Ministry of Transport is to finance construction work on the 75km section of D1 highway between Martin and Presov from state funds, with work expected to start in the second quarter of 2011.
February 20, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
2875 Slovakia’s Ministry of Transport is to finance construction work on the 75km section of D1 highway between Martin and Presov from state funds, with work expected to start in the second quarter of 2011.

The move towards state funding is a major change in policy as the highway was originally planned to be paid for through a PPP by the Slovenske Dialnice consortium, which had won the concession for the project.

However, the deal was cancelled and Slovenske Dialnice has said it will dispute a €10 million fine being imposed by the Ministry for allegedly not being able to secure finance for the construction and operation of the Martin-Presov section.

Slovak construction firm 2877 Doprastav, which was part of the Slovenske Dialnice consortium, said that it secured finance worth €1.66 billion from 18 commercial banks. Of this, €1 billion was from the 1054 European Investment Bank (EIB); €190 million from the 1166 European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and €379 million from other sources. The total finances available for the project totalled €3.23 billion, which was sufficient for the project, according to Doprastav.

The construction companies claim the project failed due to objections stemming from environmental groups, for which the government is responsible, and the EIB and EBRD expressed concern over the D1 project when the environmental issues were revealed.

Questions were raised regarding the legality of the environmental impact assessment, which resulted in the project being scrutinised by the 2465 European Commission. After this the EIB and EBRD showed reservations as pushing ahead with the project as it stood could end in a legal tangle at the European Court of Justice.

Following elections in Slovakia a new administration took power and announced its concern over the cost of the D1 project, although the consortium did manage to reduce the budget required for the work by addressing bank interest charges. Responsibility for the original environmental impact assessment may prove to be the key to this complex legal tangle.

Related Content

  • Construction delays affect Bosnian highway project
    May 10, 2012
    In Bosnia, delays have affected the construction work on the country’s key Corridor 5c highway project. So far 37km of the 336km Corridor 5c highway has been built, with 21km under construction and a further 43km section being cleared for work to commence. Construction work on a section of the Corridor 5c highway is set to commence by the end of September 2011. The section of highway being built is located in Ljubuska and Capljina, with work staring on the 4km Kravica-Bijaca and due for completion in 10 mon
  • Kenya develops annuity road funding model
    May 8, 2015
    Kenya is introducing novel methods for funding its necessary road infrastructure development - Shem Oirere writes. Kenya has unveiled a new financing model for road construction and reviewed its design standards and construction methodologies, which forms part of a new strategy for the East African country. Under this new plan Kenya is planning to upgrade 10,000km of road, with these links featuring asphalt surfacing; the work being carried out over the next five years at a cost of US$2.8 billion. Despite t
  • Delay for Tvrdosin-Nizna R3 section in Slovakia
    June 22, 2023
    The NDS agency has not reported by how much the contracted cost of €62 million will rise.
  • Slovakia highway opening faces delays
    March 2, 2017
    A key stretch of the D3 highway in Slovakia will open in the third quarter of 2017. This timescale represents a delay however as the section of road was originally planned to open in the second quarter of 2017. The 4.25km section runs from Zilina Strazov to Zilina Brodno and is costing close to €306 million to construct, with most of the funding being supplied by EU sources. This stretch of the highway is both complex and challenging as it includes a 2.2km section of tunnel as well as bridge over the the Hr