Skip to main content

Financing model confirmed for German Autobahn

The refinancing package for Germany’s A8 Autobahn has now been formalised. The section of the A8 runs between Ulm and Augsburg in the south of Germany and is operated by concession firm Pansuevia, a 50:50 partnership between HOCHTIEF and STRABAG. The 58 km section of the A8 between Ulm and Augsburg was opened to traffic on schedule in September 2015 after four years of construction. PANSUEVIA designed, financed, and carried out the widening of the section to six lanes and took over maintenance and operation
June 27, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
The refinancing package for Germany’s A8 Autobahn has now been formalised. The section of the A8 runs between Ulm and Augsburg in the south of Germany and is operated by concession firm Pansuevia, a 50:50 partnership between 981 HOCHTIEF and 945 STRABAG. The 58 km section of the A8 between Ulm and Augsburg was opened to traffic on schedule in September 2015 after four years of construction. PANSUEVIA designed, financed, and carried out the widening of the section to six lanes and took over maintenance and operation of the section for a period of 30 years. Construction was carried out by a joint venture consisting of STRABAG Großprojekte, HOCHTIEF Infrastruktur and Ed Züblin.

The refinancing replaces the original financing from May 2011 for the public-private partnership (PPP) motorway widening project between Ulm and Augsburg. The financial close has been achieved following an agreement with the banks KfW Ipex-Bank, Nord LB, SEB and Société Générale, the institutional investors MEAG and LBPAM (La Banque Postale Asset Management) and the European Investment Bank (EIB). The EIB will stay on board as creditor and has also made use for the first time of its new financing instrument, Senior Debt Credit Enhancement (SDCE). As a subordinated debt instrument, SDCE is designed to improve the risk position of the preferential creditors. The aim is to implement an important goal of the European Community, to provide easier access for private capital to investments in transport infrastructures.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Nicaragua capital highway route financing secured
    June 26, 2017
    The financing package for a key highway project in Nicaragua’s capital Managua has now been secured.
  • Malaysia’s West Coast Expressway gets project finances in order
    July 2, 2015
    Malaysia’s West Coast Expressway company has reported that it will inject nearly US$425 million into its West Coast Expressway project. Total cost of the West Coast Expressway, which will stretch 233km between Banting in Selangor state and Taiping in Perak state on the Malaysian peninsula, is expected to be around $1.56 billion. The highway will be built over five years as a build-operate-transfer project with a concession of 50 years, The Star newspaper reported in February 2014.
  • EIB supporting Finnish PPP highway project
    June 17, 2015
    The European Investment Bank (EIB) is providing financial support for a key Finnish highway project, which will be run on a PPP basis. The EIB is providing a €102 million long-term loan to finance the construction of a 32km highway stretch between Hamina and Vaalimaa in Finland. This section will be built on a public-private-partnership (PPP) basis. Using this model is expected to reduce the construction cost and also shorten the time needed to complete the work in comparison to a conventional procurement p
  • BESIX-MTH awards Nordhavn work to Bravida
    February 5, 2024
    Bravida Denmark, on behalf of the BESIX-MTH joint venture, will install plumbing, electricity, ventilation, road lighting and light signals for Copenhagen’s Nordhavn Tunnel.