Skip to main content

Funding for Rwanda roads rebuild

Foreign funding will help pay for key road rebuilding work in Rwanda. Loans worth US$162.4 million are being provided by the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), with a $22 million development grant also coming from the EU. These financial sources will help pay for work to improve the 92km long link connecting Kayonza with Rusumo as well as the 116km road between Kagitumba and Kayonza. These road links are of importance as they help connect Rwanda to its nei
July 18, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Foreign funding will help pay for key road rebuilding work in Rwanda. Loans worth US$162.4 million are being provided by the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), with a $22 million development grant also coming from the EU. These financial sources will help pay for work to improve the 92km long link connecting Kayonza with Rusumo as well as the 116km road between Kagitumba and Kayonza. These road links are of importance as they help connect Rwanda to its neighbours. Kagitumba is close to Rwanda’s northern border with Uganda, while Rusumo is close to the border with Tanzania, which lies to the east.

Through traffic between landlocked Rwanda and the much larger countries of Uganda and Tanzania are crucial for trade and to its economic development. Highway links from Kenya’s port of Mombasa and Tanzania’s port of Dar es Salaam are vital for East Africa, with work underway to improve these links and boost capacity. Meanwhile a series of road development projects are also underway to construct a new orbital network around Lake Victoria, which sits in between Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya, as well as being close to Rwanda and Burundi.

Related Content

  • New African bridge and highway connections
    May 6, 2021
    New African bridge and highway connections are being planned.
  • Kenya port suspension bridge project makes progress
    January 15, 2019
    A new suspension bridge in Kenya’s key port city, Mombasa, will help unlock potential – Shem Oirere reports Plans for the construction of a US$200 million suspension bridge in Kenya heva moved a notch higher. The country's urban roads agency recently announced the shortlisting of three bidders for the design, finance, construct, operate, maintain and transfer public private partnership (PPP) contract model. Kenya Urban Roads Authority (KURA) is a state agency that manages, develops, rehabilitates and mai
  • Ethiopia announces three road projects worth over $240 million
    April 17, 2015
    In Ethiopia, three road projects worth over US$240 million will be built as part of the country's fourth road sector development plan. The government will fund the projects using its own resources. The first project is the 83km Sodo-Tercha asphalt-concrete project, costing around $84 million and to be built by China Railway Seventh Group. Completion is scheduled for 19 months. The second project, worth $102 million is the 99km Bilbela-Sekota road project, scheduled to take 39 months and to be built
  • Vandals attack road fittings on key Nairobi road link
    April 24, 2013
    A wave of vandalism has hit a new superhighway from Nairobi as Shem Oirere reports. The newly opened 45km superhighway in Kenya’s capital Nairobi is facing a new challenge that threatens to erode its international standards and compromise the benefits it is meant to generate. A wave of vandalism targeting road fittings has hit the US$360 million highway linking Nairobi to Thika Town, posing a new challenge in the maintenance of the new road infrastructure in Kenya. The destruction delayed the completion of