Skip to main content

Kenya highway link upgrade planned

Plans are moving forward with regard to the upgrade work to the highway connecting Kenya’s capital Nairobi with the port of Mombasa.
June 19, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
RSS

Plans are moving forward with regard to the upgrade work to the highway connecting Kenya’s capital Nairobi with the port of Mombasa. In all the project will stretch for some 485km and cost around US$2.2 billion, with the work involving upgrading the route to a dual carriageway along its entire length. Funding is expected to come from international sources, including the US Exim Banks and the 1586 African Development Bank. The route will be tolled, with a 25 year pay-back period being anticipated. Construction work will start first on the 42km section between Mombasa and Mariakani. Several bridges will be built along the route.

The project is needed as the existing road has just one lane in either direction and suffers badly from congestion. The road carries a high percentage of heavy trucks travelling to and from the port of Mombasa and the route also has a poor reputation for safety due to a large number of dangerous overtakes. In April of this year alone there were two separate head-on collisions within the space of a few days, resulting in the loss of 27 lives in one crash and eight in the other.

The upgraded route will provide an important link through to Uganda as well as Rwanda and Burundi when it is complete. These landlocked countries will benefit economically from a dual carriageway connection to the port of Mombasa.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Kenya-Tanzania road link being rebuilt
    November 14, 2017
    Work to improve the 445km road link connecting Kenya with Tanzania should commence in 2018. The African Development Bank (AfDB) is intending to put US$300 million into the project but is also seeking co-funding. A further $485 million will be needed to pay for the project, which should then take three years to construct. The route will run along the coastline, connecting Malindi in Kenya with Bagamoyo in Tanzania. Around 215km of the route runs through Kenya, with the remaining 230km in Tanzania. On the Ken
  • East Africa drives towards road tolling
    March 18, 2016
    Road tolling is increasing in East Africa as the region’s countries expand highway networks - Shem Oirere writes. The drive towards road tolling in East Africa is gaining momentum. Uganda appears to have broken ranks with its neighbours to make huge strides in achieving progress with this innovative road financing plan. Road tolling has hitherto has been held back in East Africa for lack of political goodwill and State bureaucracies. Kenyan government officials have made announcements on planned road tollin
  • Innovative road/drainage tunnel plan for Jakarta
    February 16, 2015
    An innovative combined road and drainage tunnel is being proposed for Indonesia’s capital Jakarta. A study is underway at the moment for this novel integrated tunnel project, which is expected to cost in the region of US$1.88 billion. Work is due to commence during 2015, with the initial phase of the construction being carried out by Antaredja Mulia Jaya. The project is calling for two 12km tunnels that will help alleviate flooding in the city during periods of high rainfall as well as featuring a road. The
  • New Zimbabwe highway upgrade being planned
    August 24, 2016
    Plans are in hand for road widening work and surfacing upgrades for a key route crossing Zimbabwe. The highway upgrade is being carried out by a joint venture partnership between Chinese firm China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC) and Austrian Company Geiger International. This follows agreements being reached between the joint venture partners and the Zimbabwe Government. The work is needed as the existing road links along the route are unable to cope with that current traffic volumes that include a high