Skip to main content

Uganda's major rural road investment

Uganda's National Roads Authority (UNRA) is investing heavily in a major rural road upgrade programme for 2011, which is intended to boost transport.
February 23, 2012 Read time: 1 min
The 1069 Uganda National Roads Authority (UNRA) is investing heavily in a major rural road upgrade programme for 2011, which is intended to boost transport. The UNRA has outlines a plan to invest a healthy US$344 million that will see the construction of over 10,000km of district roads. The programme includes upgrades and improvements to 60 existing roads and this part of the plan is expected to take three years to complete. Funding is being provided by European sources as well as by the Ugandan Government. Roads being rebuilt include the 208km Nyakahita-Ibanda-Kamwenge-Fortportal link, a 135km road from Mpigi-Kabulasoke-Maddu-Sembabule, the 75km Mbarara-Kikagati road and a 104km project from Gulu-Atiak-Bibia-Nimulle.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Road development projects for Uganda funded by Japan loans
    September 14, 2015
    A series of road projects in Uganda will benefit from funding supplied by Japan. Around US$168 million in loans from the Japanese Government will be used to improve the roads in and around Uganda’s capital Kampala. The Japanese Government has pledged to assist the Ugandan Government in developing its economy, with road infrastructure improvements seen as a major step along this path. The next Tokyo International Conference on African Development will be held in Kenya in 2016. The two countries have also agr
  • Puerto Rico road revamp
    April 24, 2012
    Work is starting on the Dos Hermanos Bridge that links Old San Juan to other sections of the city in Puerto Rico.
  • China's major highway investment
    March 5, 2012
    China's Shandong and Tianjing Provinces plan to boost transport links with major investment programmes in hand.
  • Modern road system is 'a must'
    August 2, 2012
    Australia's GDP could see a major increase if traffic bottlenecks in big cities were to be removed, and the government is addressing this as a matter of urgency A modern road system is a must in Australia where it is estimated that the removal of traffic bottlenecks could potentially raise the country's GDP by 0.8%. According to the Committee for Economic Development of Australia (CEDA), which made the prediction, infrastructure bottlenecks (particularly in cities, which account for over 70% of the country'