Skip to main content

Chinese contractors in Netherlands?

Chinese firms may play a role in the ?1.5 billion A6/A9 highway project in the Netherlands.
March 5, 2012 Read time: 1 min
Chinese firms may play a role in the €1.5 billion A6/A9 highway project in the Netherlands. The project requires building a number of tunnels, bridges and connecting highways between Almere and Amsterdam. The 1093 Dutch Investment Bank NIBC is tendering for the project and has said that should it win, it would involve Chinese banks and contractors. The development is of note as Chinese firms are keen to compete in tenders outside of the country, including for European projects. So far Chinese contractors have had great success winning deals in other Asian nations and parts of Africa but apart from a few contracts in parts of Eastern Europe (such as Poland) they have not so far developed a significant share of the EC market. Winning projects in the Netherlands would be of key significance as the country is noted for its heavy traffic volumes, with a great deal of through traffic to and from its busy ports, as well as for its high standards of highway construction. Any Chinese road builder operating in the Netherlands would have to meet some of the highest construction quality specifications for highways of any country in the world.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Support for Poland’s A1
    July 6, 2012
    The European Investment Bank (EIB) has in total granted a long-term facility of €1.070 billion for the construction of the second phase of the A1 motorway forming part of the priority trans-European transport network connecting the north of Poland (Gdansk) with the Austrian capital Vienna, via the Czech and Slovak Republics. The loan will finance the construction of a 62km section of the A1 motorway between Nowe Marzy and Torun on the basis of a design, build, finance and operate (DBFO) concession. This con
  • Norway’s new ‘green’ highway route
    November 13, 2020
    A new route in Norway will provide a faster and greener highway connection between the capital city Oslo and the northern city of Trondheim
  • Road sector drives European construction’s recovery
    June 27, 2017
    The European road building market is forecast to grow strongly in real terms from now to the end of 2019, as a strengthening economy boosts construction, creating investment and jobs.
  • Ethiopia races on with projects
    June 13, 2012
    Ethiopia is pursuing a 10-year $2.4 billion development plan, part of which are ambitious road developments. Shem Oirere reports Ethiopia is hastening its pace towards accessing a share of the East Africa commodity market and opening itself up for foreign investment through the implementation of an ambitious road development strategy, the Road Sector Development Programme (RSDP). The landlocked nation has convinced a number of international lenders of the viability of RSDP, with some of them now loosening