Skip to main content

Bosnia gets EBRD loan for Corridor 5c work

The project will include the construction of an interchange and a 15 km dual-carriage motorway section, along the Mostar North-South section.
By David Arminas January 8, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
European Corridor 5c – the backbone of Bosnia’s social and economic prosperity (image courtesy of Motorways of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina - JP Autoceste FBiH)

The EBRD will provide a €110 million loan to Bosnia and Herzegovina for construction of the Mostar North-Mostar South section of pan-European Corridor 5c.

The project will include the construction of an interchange and a 15 km dual-carriage motorway section, the EBRD – European Bank for Reconstruction and Development said in a press release.

As well, the European Union will provide a €150 million grant through the Western Balkans Investment Framework (WBIF) and up to €150 million will be secured from local commercial banks for the project.

The WBIF is a joint initiative of the European Union, financial institutions, bilateral donors and the governments of the western Balkans. It provides financing and technical assistance to strategic investments in the energy , environment, social, transport and digital infrastructure sectors. It also supports private sector development initiatives.

The 700km Corridor 5c starts in the Hungarian capital Budapest, runs via northern Osijek in Croatia, through Bosnia and Herzegovina via Doboj, Zenica, Sarajevo and Mostar to end in the Croatian Adriatric port of Ploče.

According to the WBIF, Corridor 5c is the backbone of Bosnia’s connectivity – it has around 340km of the route – and is strategically vital for its economic development, making it a top priority for the Western Balkans regional development.

Bosnia’s Corridor 5c section is the first major motorway and the largest ever infrastructure project in the country´s history. More than 68km of motorway, including one cross-border bridge, have been supported by EU grants, blended with loans by European Bank for Reconstruction and Development as well as the European Investment Bank (EIB).

When work is done, the WBIF says that a typical journey from Sarajevo to the Adriatic Sea that now takes three and a half hours will be reduced to two hours.

Meanwhile, Bosnian media report that the 5.5km Poprikuše-Nemila section of 5c in Bosnia, originally scheduled for completion in May 2024, has experienced a delay and a significant cost increase. The project was initially contracted for €208 million.

However, the Turkish contractor, Cengiz Insaat, has been granted a further €27.2 million and an extension of 182 days due to unforeseen geophysical conditions encountered during construction.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Serbia and Bosnia consider options for a Belgrade-Sarajevo project
    December 19, 2016
    Serbia and Bosnia have started talks on constructing a fast highway between the Serbian capital Belgrade and Sarajevo, capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Serbian Vice President Zorana Mihajlovic met with the Bosnian minister of transport, Ismir Jusko, to agree on forming a joint working group to consider routes and road construction, according to the Serbian newspaper B92. Mihajlovic said that Serbia's main focus is for building the 100km Pozega-Visegrad section, of which 60km is in Serbia and 40km in
  • EBRD cash for tourist roads in Albania
    June 16, 2023
    The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development said part of the goal is to allow tourism to continue beyond the traditional summer months.
  • Road tolls in Bosnia are to rise by over 100%.
    August 24, 2012
    Director of the Bosnian motorways company Autoceste FBiH, Ensad Karic, said the federal government of Bosnia and Herzegovina had approved the increase, which will be effective from 13 June, 2013. Prices for personal vehicles on the Sarajevo-Zenica 37km motorway will increase from BAM 2 to BAM 4.20 (US$2.68).
  • European Road Conference: Corridors for Shared Prosperity and transport Connectivity
    May 10, 2018
    Organised by key representative organisations of the roads and mobility sector, the European Road Conference to be held 22nd-24th October 2018 in Dubrovnik, Croatia offers an essential platform to deepen the understanding of regional mobility challenges and achieve consensus on key policy, investment and planning measures. According to IRF president & CEO C Patrick Sankey “South East Europe is at an important crossroads in the development of its connectivity programs, securing a critical role as a gateway