Skip to main content

Papua New Guinea is set for extensive road bridge work upgrades

Papua New Guinea is set to start road and bridge upgrades that could cost upwards of US$576 million. Work on bridges will be paid partly through agreements with the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs, amounting to around US$53 million, and the Asian Development Bank which is putting in nearly $32 million. The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs has also earmarked $101 million to upgrade of arterial roads to standard concrete in the port city of Lae, the capital of Morobe Province. Lae, the
January 21, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
Papua New Guinea is set to start road and bridge upgrades that could cost upwards of US$576 million.

Work on bridges will be paid partly through agreements with the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs, amounting to around US$53 million, and the 943 Asian Development Bank which is putting in nearly $32 million.

The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs has also earmarked $101 million to upgrade of arterial roads to standard concrete in the port city of Lae, the capital of Morobe Province. Lae, the second-largest city in Papua New Guinea, is located at the start of the Highlands Highway, which is the main land transport corridor from the Highlands region to the coast and near the delta of the Markham River.

Lae is also the largest cargo port of the country and the industrial heat of the country.

Overall, the Asian Development Bank will allocate $537 million over five years. This is apart from the $575 million set aside for work on the Highlands Highways project, scheduled to start this year.

A report last October by Papua’s internet business publication, Business Advantage PNG, noted that road investment would be around $2.7 billion over the next five years. However, David Wereh, secretary of the Department of Works and Implementation, said the country desperately needs to provide maintenance of roads that are already built.

“Our challenge is the deferred maintenance backlog,” he told the Papua New Guinea Advantage Investment and Infrastructure Summit in Port Moresby in September. “We need PGK1 billion [$383 million] each year for the next three years to clear the backlog, If we continue to delay the maintenance, then we continue to build up the backlog. We are already sitting on a time bomb.”

He said the government is considering outsourcing management and maintenance of key roads to the private sector under long-term arrangements.

Also, because the majority of Papua contractors are working at capacity, the government is trying to attract international firms but with the provisio that up to half its workforce is from local PNG sources.

Wereh added that the government is looking into allegations that the Chinese contractor building the Lae–Nadzab road had failed to employ any local staff, Wereh said he had asked the contractor to provide a breakdown of how many locals and subcontractors were involved in the project.

Wereh said he wants to see over the next five years the rebuilding the 800km Highlands Highway to “world standard”. He also wants to see upgrading of 70km of Lae City’s roads and major roads in Port Moresby, upgrading and sealing 2,500km of national highways and building 1,400km of new so-called missing link roads to connect four key road corridors.

Loans from donors such as the Asian Development Bank, Australian Aid, the World Bank, the 2416 Japan International Cooperation Agency and China’s Exim Bank provide 27% of road funding, The remainder of money must come from government coffers.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Great opportunities in Asia, conference goers are told
    January 23, 2014
    Asia’s emerging economies will be building roads for the next two decades, delegates at a recent Argus Asian Bitumen conference in Singapore heard. That means there are big opportunities for suppliers of bitumen, related technology and risk management companies - Kristina Smith reports One of the strongest messages to emerge from the Argus Asian Bitumen conference held in Singapore earlier this year is the sheer volume of road building planned in the region. For many countries there are political and finan
  • Papua New Guinea road development programme
    December 8, 2021
    Papua New Guinea is setting out a road development programme.
  • New airport for Papua New Guinea
    August 21, 2013
    A new airport has been constructed in the southern highlands of Papua New Guinea that will help with communications and logistics for the development of a natural gas project in the area. Built at Komo, the airport is sufficiently large to be able to handle the massive Russian Antonov AH-124-100 transport aircraft. Construction of the airport however proved challenging as the climate in this mountainous area is known for its changeable weather and heavy seasonal rainfall. However the airport was need
  • Progress is being made with Serbia’s Corridor 11 highway project
    October 8, 2012
    Work is underway in Serbia for the Corridor 11 highway project and a number of local firms are now carrying out construction work on the Corridor 11 section from Ub to Lajkovac. Meanwhile Azvirt from Azerbaijan is preparing the Ljig to Preljina stretch of the highway, with the €300 million work being financed by Azerbaijan. The Serbian Government is asking China’s Exim Bank for a long term loan of €850 million, of which €300 million would be for the Corridor 11 project and €550 million would be for the Mora