Skip to main content

Chilean earthquake presents big infrastructure bill

Estimates now suggest that repairs to Chile's earthquake damaged infrastructure will cost the country's government in the region of US$1.2 billion. Meanwhile private highway operators are expected to pay an additional $200 million for repairs to links they manage.
February 8, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Estimates now suggest that repairs to Chile's earthquake damaged infrastructure will cost the country's government in the region of US$1.2 billion. Meanwhile private highway operators are expected to pay an additional $200 million for repairs to links they manage. In all some 20 bridges will have to be demolished while another 20 will have to be extensively repaired or rebuilt and some of the works are expected to take up to three years to complete. Some 70km of the 1,400km of privately run highways have been damaged in the area most affected by the earthquake. The earthquake was one of the most powerful ever recorded, measuring some 8.8 on the Richter scale. The city of Concepæion where the earthquake was strongest is reported as having moved 3m by the force of the quake. In all the insurance industry is expecting to pay out a total of $7 billion to pay for all the repairs in Chile. However the country's strong economy and steady economic growth rate of 5%/year is expected to be unaffected by the recent earthquake. The death toll in Chile following this earthquake was a fraction of that seen in Haiti, just a few weeks before, despite the fact that the Chilean earthquake was significantly more powerful (at 8.8 compared with 6.8 on the logarithmic Richter scale). Building codes are much stricter in Chile so that structures are far less likely to collapse in the event of an earthquake, a factor that led to particularly high loss of life in Haiti where perhaps most buildings were sub-standard.

Related Content

  • Indonesia’s road revamp is seeing new road transport connections
    July 16, 2018
    Indonesia’s road development programme is continuing, with a series of major projects being carried out across the country that will boost transport connections. State funding will help progress on the Trans-Sumatra toll road, paying for six sections of the road link. In all the 1,480km toll road project is expected to cost nearly US$11.85 billion, with state funding paying for a significant portion of the work So far the state-owned construction firm, Hutama Karya, which is building much of the route has
  • CECE equipment manufacturer’s conference in Berlin looks ahead for construction market growth
    October 29, 2012
    The construction equipment market has been hit hard in Europe and further afield, with economic uncertainty slowing orders. But there is light on the horizon. A range of key industry speakers made presentations at the recent Committee for European Construction Equipment (CECE) congress in Berlin, outlining prospects for the next few years in Europe as well as around the world.
  • $594 million Chilean highway delayed
    May 6, 2025
    Bidding for a $594 million Chilean highway is delayed.
  • PPRS: the positive side of structural failures
    March 27, 2018
    You learn from your failures, not your successes. That was the overall message for delegates during the day-two morning session on the impact of engineering structural failures. These lessons are also too often “painful”, said Anne-Marie Leclerq, deputy minister for infrastructure within the ministry of transport for the Canadian province of Quebec. On September 30, 2006, a span of the six-lane Concorde Bridge in Laval, near Montreal, collapsed crushing to death five people and injuring six. Only recently