Skip to main content

Brazil: contractors fear more layoffs as DNIT fails to pay up

The head of Brazil’s association of road constructors has warned of more layoffs unless the National Department of Infrastructure and Transport (DNIT) starts paying its contractors. Jose Alberto Pereira Ribeiro, president of ANEOR – National Association of Road Works - said companies already have been forced to lay off around 1,700 workers in light of non-payment by the government. Another 950 employees are on forced holidays. Ribeiro claimed DNIT failed to meet its financial obligations for September
November 25, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
The head of Brazil’s association of road constructors has warned of more layoffs unless the National Department of Infrastructure and Transport (DNIT) starts paying its contractors.

Jose Alberto Pereira Ribeiro, president of ANEOR – National Association of Road Works - said companies already have been forced to lay off around 1,700 workers in light of non-payment by the government. Another 950 employees are on forced holidays.

Ribeiro claimed DNIT failed to meet its financial obligations for September, amounting to US$275 million, and another $275 million for October.

By the end of November, DNIT is expected to owe $738 million to companies contracted to carry out road works.

A report on Brazil’s construction sector by the %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal Financial Times newspaper Visit FT page false http://www.ft.com/home/uk false false%> in August 2012 noted that, according to research from 3347 Goldman Sachs, only 6% of Brazil’s roads are paved, compared with 54% in China and 80% in Russia. Also, a 3019 World Economic Forum survey of infrastructure quality gave Brazil 3.6 out of 7, compared with China’s 5.5. Mexico and Chile were ahead of Brazil on almost all measures, from roads, railways and ports to air transport, with the exception of electricity supply.
 
%$Linker: 2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 18061 0 oLinkExternal World Highways reported in July Visit brazil opening tender processes for highways tunnels and road repairs page false /categories/road-highway-structures/news/brazil-opening-tender-processes-for-highways-tunnels-and-road-repairs/ false false%> that DNIT had plans for a series of tenders for major highway, tunnel and road repair projects, all of which form part of phase 2 of the country's growth acceleration plan, PAC. The first of the key projects opening for tender will be the new 1.4km Morro dos Cavalos tunnel in the city of Palhoca in the southern state of Santa Catarina. The tunnel will form part of federal highway BR-101. Work is expected to cost $295 million and the tunnel should be open by 2017.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Outset’s Lanx Evo app turns an iPhone into a portable weigh scale display
    January 6, 2017
    Italian firm Outset has extended the functionality of its Lanx Evo on-board truck weighing system with the development of an app for the iOS platform. Called Lanx Evo, the app allows operators to use an iPhone to connect to Outset’s on-board truck scale, enabling the iOS device to show a continuous display of payload. This system is ideal, said the company, for truck drivers who load their own vehicles as the use of an iPhone gives them a portable weigh scale display that can be seen from the cab of the loa
  • Outset’s Lanx Evo app turns an iPhone into a portable weigh scale display
    April 19, 2013
    Italian firm Outset has extended the functionality of its Lanx Evo on-board truck weighing system with the development of an app for the iOS platform. Called Lanx Evo, the app allows operators to use an iPhone to connect to Outset’s on-board truck scale, enabling the iOS device to show a continuous display of payload. This system is ideal, said the company, for truck drivers who load their own vehicles as the use of an iPhone gives them a portable weigh scale display that can be seen from the cab of the loa
  • Sunderland’s sliding bridge slips across the Wear
    October 26, 2016
    Slowly but surely, a 2,500 tonne section of a new bridge deck was eased out from the banks of the River Wear near Sunderland in northern England. It now straddles the water, pointing towards the opposite bank which it will eventually reach after another sliding operation next year likely. The project to build the New Wear Crossing is now half way through with the first half of the steel deck bridge poised mid-river. Completion of the bridge is expected in the spring of 2018. This month, hydraulic jack
  • BLS Enterprises is offering new milling machine trackpads
    January 6, 2017
    Component specialist BLS Enterprises is offering a durable replacement track pad for use on Wirtgen milling machines. President Barry Stoughton said, “We have a direct replacement for the EPS system.” He said that this two part pad system allows the pad to bolt directly onto the track. Long life and durability are claimed, as well as ease of replacement.