Skip to main content

Brazil: Dnit proposes suspending 61 projects due to lack of funds

Brazil's national department of transport infrastructure, Dnit, has approved a proposal to suspend work on 29 road projects across 12 states. The approval comes after severe budget cuts this year and the number of affected works could increase to 61. Dnit noted, however, that no work will be immediately stopped and that current contracts will be maintained. The proposal will now go before the Ministry of Transport and Planning and the Office of the Chief of Staff before it can receive final approva
May 9, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Brazil's national department of transport infrastructure, Dnit, has approved a proposal to suspend work on 29 road projects across 12 states.

The approval comes after severe budget cuts this year and the number of affected works could increase to 61.

Dnit noted, however, that no work will be immediately stopped and that current contracts will be maintained.

The proposal will now go before the Ministry of Transport and Planning and the Office of the Chief of Staff before it can receive final approval.

Dnit approval was based on an internal study which highlighted a lack of capacity to maintain these works given budget limitations. More than half of the department's budget has already been allocated to projects.

Meanwhile, a section of the BR-153 highway will go out to tender again, according to Valor Economico, an online newspaper.
 
The stretch of the BR-153 that connect the cities of Anapolis (Goiais) and Alianca do Tocantins (Tocantins) has been under the responsibility of contractor Galvao Engenharia since September 2014.

The highway’s importance is because it is used for the distribution of grains produced in the centre-west region of Brazil. The country’s national land transport agency ANTT has requested the preparation of new rules and regulations for the viability studies for the 624km section of the highway.

The original contract required that Galvao Engenharia widen the road over five years from 2014. However, due to its involvement in the Lava Jato corruption investigation, Galvao Egenharia had its financing requests denied by BNDES - Brazilian Development Bank, also known as National Bank for Economic and Social Development.

The company does not have enough money to conclude the initial works. After abandoning the project, Galvao presented ANTT with four proposals, including the transfer of the leasing contract.

Related Content

  • Colombia: New decree allows pension funds to finance 4G projects
    June 25, 2015
    Columbian president Juan Manuel Santos Colombia has said pension fund money could help finance the country’s ambitious 4G motorway projects. Columbia has 35 road projects underway costing more than US$11.7 billion, including the first two 4G tender waves with six public-private partnerships that have already been approved. During a banking convention held in the coastal city of Cartagena in mid-June, Banco Davivienda president Efrain Forero lending capacity studies have been completed for 4GH projects
  • Norway agrees funding for road repairs
    June 29, 2023
    Construction and civil engineering association EBA says the allocated €103 million will go a long way to shoring up road maintenance requirements on national roads.
  • Plans are in hand for a major new highway link in Brazil
    November 26, 2012
    Plans are in hand in Brazil’s Minas Gerais State for work to an 817km stretch of the BR-116 highway. The project is expected to cost in the region of US$2.48 billion to carry out. The Brazilian Transport Agency (ANTT) is opening the project to tender and it will be offered under a concession package. The 817km section of the highway will feature eight toll stations. Meanwhile, ANTT is opening the preliminary tender for the concession of the BR-040 motorway at the end of December 2012
  • PPRS Nice 2018: maintenance moves mountains
    June 22, 2018
    Strategic maintenance was a major theme at the second Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit in Nice, France. The world is changing, mobility is changing and so roads must change and adapt for the future.” With this brief statement, Jacques Tavernier opened the second PPRS Summit. “At the same time there is a growing awareness of poor or non-existent maintenance for highways. The question for this conference is how to adapt road maintenance in the face of this challenge,” said Tavernier, in his role as