Skip to main content

New dual carriageway for South East Nigeria

Work is nearing completion on Nigeria’s important East-West road project. The new dual carriageway link should be ready to carry traffic in a matter of months. In all the project was originally expected to cost in the order of US$1.93 billion to construct and work commenced back in 2006. However an additional stretch may now be added that will extend the route. This project is of significance as it improves transport links to the South East of Nigeria, an area of the country that has long been overlooked fo
March 11, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
RSSWork is nearing completion on Nigeria’s important East-West road project. The new dual carriageway link should be ready to carry traffic in a matter of months. In all the project was originally expected to cost in the order of US$1.93 billion to construct and work commenced back in 2006. However an additional stretch may now be added that will extend the route.

This project is of significance as it improves transport links to the South East of Nigeria, an area of the country that has long been overlooked for infrastructure investment. This underdevelopment has been in spite of the Niger Delta’s economic importance to the country as a whole as it is the location for much of Nigeria’s oil industry, its prime source of revenue. The dual carriageway route presently runs through four states, Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers and Akwa Ibom. The section in Delta State is now complete, and runs from the town of Warri. The road will end at Eket in Akwa Ibom State at present, although there are plans to extend the dual carriageway into Cross River State and link with one of Nigeria’s former capitals, Calabar. The additional link is expected to cost an additional $1 billion and may involve a degree of complexity to construct as it will require a number of bridges to cross the numerous creeks in the area.

Related Content

  • A key expressway project is due in Nepal
    July 26, 2012
    The Nepalese Government plans to open a key expressway project to tender. The Ministry of Physical Planning works and Transport Management is inviting bidders to show their interest in the construction of the Kathmandu-Nijgadh-Pathlaiya Terai/Madesh Expressway project. This new road link is intended to be offered under a PPP/BOT model. The 76km expressway is expected to cost US$853 million to construct. A feasibility study has been carried out and the expressway will be designed to meet the Class – A Catego
  • Nigerian highway concessions being offered
    September 14, 2021
    More Nigerian highway concessions are being offered.
  • Deutsche Bank and Akbank among banks to fund Gebze-Izmir motorway
    March 19, 2015
    A final financing agreement for Turkey's 421km Gebze-Izmir motorway project will be signed by nine banks, eight of which will be Turkish, in April. The agreement will be for around US$4.73 billion of the deal likely to cost in total more than $6 billion and which is the country’s largest public-private partnership project. The banks are Deutsche Bank and Turkish banks Akbank, Garanti Bankasi, Finansbank, Is Bankasi, Halkbank, Ziraat Bankasi, Yapi Kredi and Vakfbank. Work has been going on since 2010 for the
  • Lower Thames Crossing gets green light
    March 26, 2025
    The 14.5-mile project near London will include a 2.6-mile tunnel under the Thames River and come at a cost of around £8.3 billion.