Skip to main content

Five consortia vie for Paraguay’s first phase of bi-oceanic corridor

Five consortia are vying for the contract to pave 255km of Paraguay’s bi-oceanic corridor project - the Loma Plata-Carmelo Peralta road paving works. The five consortia are INECS, EPI, ACI Proyectos Cialpa, Geocon-MCSA and Loma Plata. The 255km contract is the first phase, costing US$300 million, of a 1,045km overall corrider that will need around $926 million. Tenders for the first phase were launched in November covering the section between Carmelo Peralta, Cruce Centinela and Loma Plata in the w
March 14, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Five consortia are vying for the contract to pave 255km of Paraguay’s bi-oceanic corridor project - the Loma Plata-Carmelo Peralta road paving works.

The five consortia are INECS, EPI, ACI Proyectos Cialpa, Geocon-MCSA and Loma Plata.

The 255km contract is the first phase, costing US$300 million, of a 1,045km overall corrider that will need around $926 million.

Tenders for the first phase were launched in November covering the section between Carmelo Peralta, Cruce Centinela and Loma Plata in the western region of the country under a turnkey format. The tender winner for the first phase must finance the construction and be repaid upon completion. But funds may also be sought from international investors for the second phase if the tender winner cannot self-finance the work.

World Highways reported in November that the second stage of the project that will connect Paraguay with Argentina and cost $340 million. Work include paving the Cruce Centinela-Mariscal Estigarribia-Pozo Hondo road section.

The tender for the development of the final engineering design of the second section will be launched in 2016.

The third phase of the initiative is construction of the bridge over the Paraguay River between the cities of Carmelo Peralta in Paraguay and Puerto Murtinho in Brazil. Details of the project are outlined in the Cosiplan project portfolio from the Union of South American Nations.

Meanwhile, the Commission of Public Works and Communications (MOPC) approved a loan for more than $183 million for road infrastructure projects. The OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID) will provide just over $43 million, while Fonplata, a multilateral fund set up by Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay, will contribute with $140 million. The resources will be aimed to the south-west integration corridor road scheme, known as Corredores de Integracion Sur-Oeste.

MOPC is also waiting for National Congress authorisation to execute the three projects financed by Fonplata -- Puerto Pilar bypass, refurbishment of Alberdi-Pilar road stretch and the renovation of Remanso-Falcon section.

Related Content

  • New Argentina highway construction work
    January 11, 2019
    Construction is underway for Argentina’s new Mendoza-San Juan Highway – Mauro Nogarin reports The rehabilitation and maintenance works of more than 3,300km of routes is now underway in Argentina. This followed on after the takeover of six new road corridors under the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model, which took place in August 2018. The rehabilitation and maintenance works are being carried out prior to the start of the main projects, which will include the construction of highways. Building the
  • Paraguay-Brazil bridge facing delay
    November 15, 2017
    Brazil’s economic woes are now affecting the construction of a new bridge connecting the country with Paraguay. The project is expected to cost US$71.34 million and the contract was awarded to Construbase-Ciudad-Paulitec and the necessary environmental permits were also given earlier in 2017. However now that Brazil is unable to provide its portion of the funds necessary, the completion date will have to wait. The bridge was to have been the second such link between the two countries and is required as the
  • Tunnels and bridges, improving Argentina's major road link
    April 24, 2012
    A road improvement plus tunnel and bridge building contract in an area once inhabited by dinosaurs in northern Argentina, is a small but key part of an ambitious project to complete a road that will eventually link the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Latin America - Adriana Potts reports. Remote, rough and spectacular are words that come to mind when describing the mountains of Ischigualasto in Argentina's northern province of San Juan This is the only place in the world where an undisturbed sequence of rock
  • Cambodia's road repair action plan
    February 24, 2012
    A newly planned project aims to address road maintenance issues in Cambodia.