Skip to main content

Zimbabwe highway project faces delay

The project to build Zimbabwe’s crucial north-south highway link is facing delays, with the contract now having to be re-awarded. The tender was originally awarded to an Austrian firm, Geiger International, but with progress having proven very slow this has been withdrawn. The deal has not yet been re-awarded. But the Zimbabwe Government is at present in discussions with the second bidder from the original tender process, Anhui Foreign Economic Construction Group Limited (AFECC), over the contract. The hig
July 12, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
The project to build Zimbabwe’s crucial north-south highway link is facing delays, with the contract now having to be re-awarded. The tender was originally awarded to an Austrian firm, Geiger International, but with progress having proven very slow this has been withdrawn. The deal has not yet been re-awarded. But the Zimbabwe Government is at present in discussions with the second bidder from the original tender process, Anhui Foreign Economic Construction Group Limited (AFECC), over the contract.


The highway project involves dualling the route from Beitbridge that lies close to the border with South Africa all the way to Chirundu, at the border with Zambia to the north, with a total expected cost of some US$2.7 billion. The route runs through the capital Harare, with a bypass also planned around the city. The project is split broadly into two main sections, between Harare and Chirundu in the north of the country and Harare and Beitbridge in the south. Some $21 million of funding has been supplied by Japan to pay for work on the Makuti to Chirundu stretch of the north-south highway. This section measures just 6.5km long but features severe gradients at present.

There are also plans to dualise the route from Beitbridge and through Zimbabwe’s second city, Bulawayo, to Victoria Falls, an important route for tourism as well as trade. Victoria Falls also lies on Zimbabwe’s border with Zambia, but it close too with the borders of Botswana and Namibia, so the road connection provides an important trade and transport link for Southern Africa.

Questions are now being asked within Zimbabwe as to why the contract was awarded to Geiger International in the first place. Although Geiger International claims to have experience in the construction sector, particularly in China, its expertise seems mainly to lie in supplying goods as well as in manufacturing and supplying fencing.

Related Content

  • Kenyan capital’s key connection construction contract cost climbs
    February 27, 2018
    The project to build the new highway link from Kenya’s capital Nairobi to the city’s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) is now expected to cost US$579 million. This represents an increase of around $206 million from the pricetag originally expected for the link. This cost increase comes despite a substantial change in the design, with the route now featuring a series of flyover sections and underpasses, instead of being elevated along its 43.5km length as originally proposed. This redesign will
  • Develop the Silk Roads, boost economic growth
    February 28, 2012
    Tony Pearce, honorary life member and former director-general of IRF Geneva, recalls the history of the Silk Roads, highlights their continued economic relevance and introduces IRF's active long-term commitment to their rehabilitation. The Silk Roads had their origins in a Chinese military mission in 138BC to purchase horses in Central Asia's Fergana Valley that were reputed to run so fast that they sweated blood. When General Chang Ch'ien reached Fergana, now in Uzbekistan, he found that the fabled horses
  • Chinese firm wins highways expansion project to decongest Nairobi
    January 5, 2017
    A Chinese contractor is carrying out a major road project intended to cut congestion in Kenyan capital Nairobi – Shem Oirere writes Chinese contractor China Wu Yi has won a US$163 million contract for the reconstruction and expansion of a 25km highway leading out of Kenya’s capital Nairobi with financing from the World Bank. The contract was awarded by the country’s National Highways Authority (KeNHA), a state-owned road agency responsible for the management, development, rehabilitation and maintenance of i
  • Mumbai’s new coastal transport link
    July 6, 2022
    Mumbai’s new coastal road presents an ambitious and challenging project that will help improve the lives of the city’s inhabitants - Mike Woof writes