Skip to main content

New Bolivian highway programme planned

Bolivia's state-owned road operator Administradora Boliviana de Carreteras (ABC) has an ambitious road building programme. This will see the construction of a further 3,172km of roads, of which almost 1,000km will be completed in 2015. The 1,000km of roads on track for completion comprise some 16 projects in seven departments. ABC has budgeted US$1.17 billion for its programme of works, an increase over the $995.4 million for the previous financial year.
June 17, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Bolivia's state-owned road operator 3542 Administradora Boliviana de Carreteras (ABC) has an ambitious road building programme. This will see the construction of a further 3,172km of roads, of which almost 1,000km will be completed in 2015. The 1,000km of roads on track for completion comprise some 16 projects in seven departments. ABC has budgeted US$1.17 billion for its programme of works, an increase over the $995.4 million for the previous financial year.

The road schemes totalling 1,000km and to be finished in 2015 include six in Cochabamba, followed La Paz (4), Chuquisaca (2), Oruro (1), Potosi (1), Beni (1) and Santa Cruz (1).  In addition, there are more than 4,000m of bridges under construction.

Fuerza Binacional de Ingenieria Social Bolivia Venezuela (FBIS-BV) says it will build 1,500km of roads in Bolivia's Amazon area during 2015. This firm will also build the highway connecting Villa Tunari and San Ignacio de Moxos.

Some industry sources consider that a lack of weighbridges is causing the deterioration of roads, whilst some projects are not awarded to professional companies, delaying road programmes, and the government needs more funds for road maintenance, as this is not being received through tolls. Other delays are linked to difficulties in accessing sand/gravel as well as blockades and weather conditions.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Highways: environmental problem or environmental enhancement?
    March 21, 2016
    Highways need not be a blight on the countryside that many people, urban planners included, believe they will always be. By Bram Miller, director, and Martin Broderick, environmental consultant, at Ramboll Environ While the world’s highway networks bring undoubted economic and social benefits, they are generally perceived to lead to negative environmental impacts. Some may consider this an unfair reputation, but it is difficult to argue that in the majority of cases both the construction and operation of
  • Funds approved for Spain's tolled highway project
    May 15, 2012
    Funding for a road project in Spain is being set out by contractor Sacyr. The savings banks Caixanova and Unicaja will provide the funding, which will allow work to be completed on a 24.5km stretch of the AP-46 toll road linking Malaga and Alto de Las Pedrizas as to date only half of the work has been finished on the €367 million project. A further €200 million is required, with Sacyr providing the rest from its own sources.
  • Bio-binder and reclaimed asphalt trials for UK
    August 15, 2024
    Heidelberg Materials has used its CarbonLock asphalt containing polymer modified bitumen bio-binders, produced as both hot mix and warm mix asphalts.
  • Nigeria’s Eko Atlantic project: a city on the sea
    September 27, 2013
    Imagine a megapolis rising, Atlantis-like, from the sea. An urban development similar in size to New York’s Manhattan that boasts thriving business and residential districts to help transform not just a city but an entire country. It sounds like the stuff of science fiction. But the Eko Atlantic project in Lagos, Nigeria, is real and has become one of the most dazzling and most discussed construction developments in the entire world. One hundred years ago, the area of land on which the new city will be bu