Skip to main content

Louis Berger wins Mozambique N303 road upgrade consultancy deal

Infrastructure consultancy Louis Berger is to provide services worth US$7.6 million for the rehabilitation of Mozambique’s National Road N303. The Sub-Saharan Regional Pipeline Corporation awarded the contract for work on the 350km narrow and unpaved carriageway that crosses Tete province. SSRPC is investing $350 million to upgrade the road that starts at the Zambezi River, where Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe have a common border. The modernised road will be the shortest link to a railway under constructi
February 19, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Louis Berger is assisting with the modernization of the 350-kilometer-long, narrow and unpaved carriageway that crosses the Tete province in Mozambique.
Infrastructure consultancy Louis Berger is to provide services worth US$7.6 million for the rehabilitation of Mozambique’s National Road N303.

The Sub-Saharan Regional Pipeline Corporation awarded the contract for work on the 350km narrow and unpaved carriageway that crosses Tete province. SSRPC is investing $350 million to upgrade the road that starts at the Zambezi River, where Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe have a common border.

The modernised road will be the shortest link to a railway under construction between the coal-rich province of Tete and the northern port of Nacala Porto, the deepest port in southern Africa. The road will offer a more cost-effective transportation solution, importantly for mineral resources, particularly copper exports.

Nacala is also the nearest port for landlocked Malawi, which is connected by a 960km railway line.

The overall project will widen the road and reinforce highway structures. Specific improvements will include alignment, pavement and signage design; drainage and ancillary works; as well as the rehabilitation of 19 bridges. Louis Berger will provide design services for the development of feasibility, environmental and social impact assessment and resettlement studies.

SSRPC is completing the work under a type of public-private partnership with the government of Mozambique’s National Roads Directorate.

“The rehabilitation of the N303 is vital not only for Mozambique but for the region as a whole,” said Jean-Pierre Dupacq, head of Louis Berger’s operations in Africa. “The modernised road will greatly boost the local economy, which is mainly dependent on coal mining, by allowing the development of local small-scale enterprises along the road.”

Upgrading the N303 comes just as the government opened a new $1 billion port and coal terminal across the deepwater Nacala Bay, opposite Nacala Porto. The port, called Nacala a Velha, will in its first phase have an annual handling capacity of 14.5 million tonnes of coal delivered from the mines in the Moatize coal basin in Tete province.

Louis Berger has been working for 25 years in Mozambique, where the firm said it has implemented around 50 projects. The public and private sector-funded contracts cover a range of professional services in transport, environment, water and sanitation, agriculture, power, telecommunications and health.

Related Content

  • African nations
    February 23, 2012
    Plans for a new highway connecting the African nations of Mozambique, Zambia and Malawi are gathering pace. The project is likely to cost up to US$600 million to complete and will provide a key trade route between the nations, with the economies of Malawi and Mozambique in particular need of development, while Zambia's copper mining industry will benefit from the link.Some $23 million will be required to construct the first section of the road forming the Nacala Corridor.
  • African nations
    April 11, 2012
    Plans for a new highway connecting the African nations of Mozambique, Zambia and Malawi are gathering pace. The project is likely to cost up to US$600 million to complete and will provide a key trade route between the nations, with the economies of Malawi and Mozambique in particular need of development, while Zambia's copper mining industry will benefit from the link.Some $23 million will be required to construct the first section of the road forming the Nacala Corridor.
  • Senegal project for consortium led by Louis Berger
    July 21, 2015
    Louis Berger is heading a consortium that will oversee a key road rebuilding project in Senegal. The package of works was awarded to the consortium by the Millennium Challenge Account (MCA). The work is for the third phase of the Ziguinchor-Tanaff-Kolda-Velingara section of National Highway 6. Work associated with this project brings the total value of consultancy services delivered by the consortium over the three project phases to nearly US$9.4 million.
  • Louis Berger lands safety audit role in four Bihar, India highway build projects
    February 18, 2014
    The National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) has selected Louis Berger (LB) to serve as safety audit consultant for four national highway construction projects in the eastern state of Bihar. A globally-recognised provider of engineering, development and management support services for public and private clients, LB will perform safety audits during the three-year construction and widening of 366kms of roadway on four national highways. The project team, led by road safety expert Brindabon Samanta, will