Skip to main content

Kazakhstan announces infrastructure investment programme to 2020

Kazakhstan’s deputy minister for investments and development Zhenis Kasymbek has said that about US$20 billion will be invested in development of all types of transport infrastructure by 2020. The main funds will be allocated for the Caspian region, in particular for projects to improve connections to Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey. Apart from road infrastructure, money will be invested to construct the Beyneu-Zhezkazgan railway and development of the Altynkol-Khorgos railway section in the direction of
April 2, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Kazakhstan’s deputy minister for investments and development Zhenis Kasymbek has said that about US$20 billion will be invested in development of all types of transport infrastructure by 2020.

The main funds will be allocated for the Caspian region, in particular for projects to improve connections to Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey. Apart from road infrastructure, money will be invested to construct the Beyneu-Zhezkazgan railway and development of the Altynkol-Khorgos railway section in the direction of China.

3260 World Highways reported earlier this year that Kazak and 1166 European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) officials visited London to highlight the possibility of a public-private partnership under the country’s revised PPP legal framework.

Representatives of more than 100 organisations, a mix of construction companies and financial institutions, attended the roadshow-style presentation to attract foreign capital for BAKAD, the Almaty Ring Road Concession. The message was that Kazakhstan has revamped the legal and contractual framework for public private partnerships and the country is now open for business.

The road show was led by the minister of economy and budget planning Yerbolat Dosayev. It was detailed regarding finances, which is what the attendees told World Highways they wanted to hear, considering the winning bidder or consortium will have to put up front 10% of the estimated US$700 million construction cost.

What is needed is a 66km toll ring road around the former Kazakh capital – that national honour was bestowed upon the northeastern city of Astana in 1997. Almaty remains the financial centre of the world's largest landlocked country and also Kazakhstan's largest city, with a population of 1.5 million.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Sourcing road financing for East Africa’s network expansion
    December 4, 2015
    East Africa’s ambitious road expansion programme is seeing the network expand significantly – Shem Oirere writes The East Africa countries of Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Rwanda have announced ambitious road sector expansion plans in the 2015/16 financial year. This is despite their national budgets being weighed down by huge deficits and persisting lack of capacity to spend resources allocated to the sector in previous years. With the huge budget deficits, the countries will have to look for alternati
  • Kazakhstan road works planned
    January 21, 2021
    Key road works are being planned in Kazakhstan.
  • Colombia’s ANI agency is driving forward the 4G PPP programme
    April 4, 2016
    Andrade Moreno is a man on a mission. The head of Colombia's infrastructure agency ANI explains how the organisation is giving foreign companies increasing confidence to invest time and money in the country. David Arminas reports Change, especially when it touches the highest levels of South American business and politics, can bring with it personal danger. Luis Fernando Andrade Moreno, president of Colombia's National Infrastructure Agency - ANI - was aware of this when he took on the role in 2011. B
  • EIB produces PPP report
    February 28, 2012
    The European Investment Bank (EIB) has released a significant study aimed at exploring and promoting Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) to fund critical infrastructure projects across nine countries in North Africa and the Middle East.