Skip to main content

Planned Paraguay PPP project postponed

Bidding for Paraguay’s route II and route VII Ypacarai-Pastoreo road expansion project has been postponed. Instead Paraguay’s Ministry of Public Works and Communications (MOPC) says that the bidding will commence on 29th June 2016. This delay follows requests by some participants in this process. However, this is the fourth time that the opening of the bidding for the project has been delayed.
May 3, 2016 Read time: 1 min

Bidding for Paraguay’s route II and route VII Ypacarai-Pastoreo road expansion project has been postponed. Instead Paraguay’s Ministry of Public Works and Communications (MOPC) says that the bidding will commence on 29th June 2016. This delay follows requests by some participants in this process. However, this is the fourth time that the opening of the bidding for the project has been delayed. A total of 11 firms have been pre-qualified in this tender, and six expressed an interest in going forward to the tender phase. This latest delay should allow time for all 11 firms to make bids. A public hearing is due to take place during which pre-qualified firms will outline their positions as well as their opinions on this first Public-Private Partnership (PPP) for Paraguay’s infrastructure sector. Investments have been estimated at US$400 million. Road toll tariffs will have a bearing on MOP’s final decision on which firm will win the bidding process.

Related Content

  • Paraguay road rebuild tender due to open
    August 7, 2019
    The tender process is being planned for a key road rebuild project for Paraguay. The contract will be for repairs, maintenance and improvement works to the stretch of Route 12, connecting Chaco'i with General Bruguez. Studies are being carried out presently to plan the work that will be required to improve the road. This section of Route 12 measures 160km and runs between Chaco'i, located just across the Paraguay River from capital Asuncion, along the border with neighbouring Argentina. The bidding process
  • Developments in tolling technology
    February 27, 2012
    Jason Barnes reviews the last few decades and the future of tolling technology. Tolling and charging technology has evolved significantly over the last three decades and that evolution is perhaps best illustrated by reductions in or complete removal of impedances to physical progress. Once, it was customary for a driver to pull up to a barrier, make some form of cash payment to a human operative in a booth, and then wait for the barrier to be raised before proceeding. Humans were eventually complemented and
  • PPP project planned for Aruba
    November 29, 2013
    The Government in Aruba in the Caribbean is giving its approval for its second PPP transport infrastructure project, the Watty Vos Boulevard. The start of the tender process for the project is planned for the first quarter of 2014. PwC is the transaction advisor for the Contracting Authority, while the Dutch Ministry of Infrastructure and local legal firm Sjiem Fat & Co are also part of the team. The project will cost some US$120 million and involves the construction of a new arterial road 2x2 around Oranje
  • The Lessons of the Genoa bridge collapse
    April 23, 2019
    The partial collapse of the Polcevera viaduct, better known as the Morandi Bridge, has prompted debate regarding the technical and administrative aspects of maintaining road infrastructures. We discussed it with the engineer Gabriele Camomilla, former Director of Research and Maintenance of the Società Autostrade, who coordinated the only major structural intervention performed on the bridge, carried out in the early 1990s