Skip to main content

Mombasa-Tanga link faces delays over design changes

Kenya has blamed design changes for delaying the start of work on a road linking the port of Mombasa to the Tansanian port of Tanga. The change to the key road’s design is from a single to dual carriageway along a section of the 445km transnational highway. However, the African Development Bank (AfDB), the principal financier of the project, said the Kenyan government itself was slow in completing preliminary studies, such as road designs, in order to start construction.
April 10, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
Kenya has blamed design changes for delaying the start of work on a road linking the port of Mombasa to the Tansanian port of Tanga.


The change to the key road’s design is from a single to dual carriageway along a section of the 445km transnational highway.

However, the 1586 African Development Bank (AfDB), the principal financier of the project, said the Kenyan government itself was slow in completing preliminary studies, such as road designs, in order to start construction.

The road from Malindi on the Kenyan coast to Bagamoyo - formerly a key trading port in north-eastern Tanzania during colonial times - will cost around US$751 million, according to the Kenya-based newspaper Business Daily Africa. AfDB will fund about 70% of the project, with the two countries covering 30% of the total cost in their respective territories.

Work on the mega project that is expected to take 36 months but the start of construction has been delayed since 2016. It was expected to start this year, but a start is now not likely until next year.

Kenya’s transport and infrastructure secretary James Macharia said the new designs will ensure that the stretch from Mtwapa to Nyali in Mombasa - including the Mtwapa Bridge - is expanded from a single to dual carriage as in the previous designs.

“We had to change the designs to make sure we do not have a bottleneck at Nyali-Mtwapa area because traffic there is a very big problem,” Macharia reportedly said. “Designs for the [Mtwapa] bridge can be complex and need time to ensure it is done properly.”

Kenya started the tendering process for contractors to do feasibility studies and environmental impact assessments last month; Tanzania has already completed this aspect of the project inside their borders.

“Tanzania is moving faster than Kenya, but since it is a multinational project, the two countries have to come together,” said Gabriel Negatu, the AfDB director-general for business development and delivery in East Africa. “Once the detailed designs are done, we will proceed either this year or next.”

The 250km Kenyan section of the transnational highway starts in Malindi and runs  through Mombasa and on to Lunga Lunga at the border with Tanzania. Most of the project is rehabilitation of the existing road.

It will then cross into Tanzania through Tanga port and stretch 175km to Bagamoyo, a world heritage town as designated by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (1384 UNESCO).

This will be the third transnational road project by the two countries. Previous projects included the are the $260 million Arusha-Namanga-Athi River Road.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • RUBBLE MASTER extends Chinese presence
    November 28, 2018
    Austrian global compact crusher manufacturer RUBBLE MASTER is benefiting from a growing dealership presence in the Chinese market – with 11 local sales partners signed up in just one year. The latest local sales partner, based in Beijing, has been recruited this week by RUBBLE MASTER’s five-employee strong, Tianjin-based sales subsidiary, Tianjin RUBBLE MASTER Technology. RUBBLE MASTER’s sales reach now stretches from Jilin in China’s north-east, to Guangdong in the south, and as far west as Sichuan. The
  • Kenya highway project financing resolution
    May 17, 2018
    Construction work on Kenya’s vital Mombasa-Nairobi highway upgrade project is now going ahead as planned. A resolution has been achieved that will solve the funding issues that had threatened to delay the project. The project will cost nearly US$3 billion in all and is crucial for the country’s economic development as it will provide a new four lane highway connecting Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, with its largest port at Mombasa. But there were concerns that the funding method based on a series of loans that w
  • 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
  • Kenyan capital’s key connection construction contract cost climbs
    February 27, 2018
    The project to build the new highway link from Kenya’s capital Nairobi to the city’s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) is now expected to cost US$579 million. This represents an increase of around $206 million from the pricetag originally expected for the link. This cost increase comes despite a substantial change in the design, with the route now featuring a series of flyover sections and underpasses, instead of being elevated along its 43.5km length as originally proposed. This redesign will