Skip to main content

Ethiopia planning road network growth

Ethiopia is setting a target of 2020 to complete its road expansion programme. The plan has been to double the length of the country’s road network in the period from 2015 to 2020. At present Ethiopia has around 121,200km of roads, compared with around 100,000km of roads in 2015. But by 2020, the Ethiopian Roads Authority (ERA) aims to expand the network to 200,000km.
June 11, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Ethiopia is setting a target of 2020 to complete its road expansion programme. The plan has been to double the length of the country’s road network in the period from 2015 to 2020. At present Ethiopia has around 121,200km of roads, compared with around 100,000km of roads in 2015. But by 2020, the Ethiopian Roads Authority (ERA) aims to expand the network to 200,000km. This expansion contrasts strongly with the country’s previous road network, with only 19,000km in all in 1990. However this expansion highlights Ethiopia’s economic growth and its focus on road development as a route to developing its trade and industry. And in the last 20 years, Ethiopia’s Ministry of Transport has supervised its ERA subsidiary in spending a budget of some US$11 billion on road building.


Several major road projects are being planned at present, with construction work now commencing by a Chinese contractor for a new highway in the south of the country. The Modjo-Hawassa Expressway will stretch 202km when complete, with two lanes in either direction. The project has been split into sections, with the for the construction of the Meki-Hawassa stretch. These include building the Meki-Ziway section, the stretch linking Ziway with Arsi Negele and the section to connect Arsi Negele with Modjo. The highway will run past the East Langano Nature Reserve as well as the Abidjatta-Shalla National Park, helping develop tourism in the region, as well as trade and transport.

Related Content

  • Vandals attack road fittings on key Nairobi road link
    April 24, 2013
    A wave of vandalism has hit a new superhighway from Nairobi as Shem Oirere reports. The newly opened 45km superhighway in Kenya’s capital Nairobi is facing a new challenge that threatens to erode its international standards and compromise the benefits it is meant to generate. A wave of vandalism targeting road fittings has hit the US$360 million highway linking Nairobi to Thika Town, posing a new challenge in the maintenance of the new road infrastructure in Kenya. The destruction delayed the completion of
  • Vietnamese expressway works planned
    May 23, 2022
    New Vietnamese expressway works are being planned.
  • Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa’s road development
    March 1, 2018
    Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, is developing its road network with a series of projects underway. In the last six months the city authorities have pushed ahead with works to 385km of roads. Around US$231 million has been budgeted for road development work, including building new links and maintaining existing roads. At present Addis Ababa’s road network extends for a total of 5,915km, compared with 5,365km in 2014. Meanwhile 2,616km of the city’s roads are surfaced with asphalt, around 44% of the total n
  • India’s massive demand for bitumen
    March 9, 2016
    India to lead the pack in bitumen consumption - Partha Pratim Basistha reports from the Asian Bitumen Conference. In the emerging global bitumen market, demand is expected to reach 122 million tonnes by 2018. Increasing road construction activities in the fast growing markets of India and China will be the main growth drivers of the bitumen market in Asia. This was the message delivered at the 10th Asian Bitumen Conference held in New Delhi, India from 23rd-24th November 2015. The two-day event, organised b