Skip to main content

Mozambique: Maputo cancels Britalar’s Julius Nyerere Avenue deal

A consortium led by Portuguese contractor Britalar has been sacked from a controversial contract to rehabilitate a prestigious thoroughfare in the Mozambique capital Maputo. The council is seeking repayment of US$1 million from the consortium that includes two other Portuguese companies, Construção Europa Ar-Lindo and Aurélio Martins Sobreiro e Filhos. Media reports also say a Chinese firm has been handed the contract to finish the work that was started in February 2013 under a deal worth $12.5 millio
January 14, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
A consortium led by Portuguese contractor Britalar has been sacked from a controversial contract to rehabilitate a prestigious thoroughfare in the Mozambique capital Maputo.

The council is seeking repayment of US$1 million from the consortium that includes two other Portuguese companies, Construção Europa Ar-Lindo and Aurélio Martins Sobreiro e Filhos.

Media reports also say a Chinese firm has been handed the contract to finish the work that was started in February 2013 under a deal worth $12.5 million, funded by the World Bank and the city council. However, no details of the Chinese firm have been reported.

The work involves repairs to Julius Nyerere Avenue, a wide boulevard that fronts many embassies but also runs through some of the city’s most crowded areas. Part of it was destroyed by heavy flooding in 2000, the AllAfrica news website reported.

The consortium began renovations along 3.5km in 2012 and was supposed to complete the job by February 2013. But relations deteriorated between the consortium and city council, which complained of sub-quality bitumen being used and generally shoddy work that resulted in potholes appearing on supposedly repaired sections of the road.

Britalar complained that the council failed to relocate local people and generally aid the construction work processes to allow schedules to be maintained. The council granted three extensions, but the work remains unfinished, AllAfrica reported.

Trouble began last April, according to the Mozambique New Agency. Samples of the materials used by Britalar were collected and sent to three laboratories, two in Mozambique and one in Portugal. All the laboratories agreed that the road had started to crumble away because of the poor quality of the materials.

Maputo’s councillor responsible for infrastructure, Victor Fonseca, said that Britalar had accepted responsibility for the allegedly botched work. He said Britalar had agreed to tear up the asphalt from the 1.6km of road where the problems occurred and relay both the base and the tarred surface of the road at a cost to Britalar of about $1.2 million and taking about 70 days.

The business news website Club of Mozambique reported that a Chinese company will take over from Britalar and some of the consortium’s machinery has been seized by banks to repay debts.

Maputo, known as Lourenço Marques before independence from Portugal in 1975, is the largest city in Mozambique. The city, on the Indian Ocean, has a population nearing two million and is known as the City of Acacias because of acacia trees found along many of its avenues, including Julius Nyerere.

Related Content

  • Mozambique’ new bridge opens to traffic
    November 14, 2018
    Mozambique’s new suspension bridge connecting Maputo with Catembe is now open to traffic. The suspension bridge is the longest of its type in Africa, measuring almost 3km-long and surpassing the previous holder of this accolade, the Mapati Bridge in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The new bridge spans Maputo Bay and forms part of a new highway connection running from Mozambique’s capital, Maputo, all the way to the border with South Africa. The route will be of major benefit for Mozambique, helping to boo
  • Atlantic City starts road diet paving work
    January 4, 2024
    The east coast US city’s traffic management improvements to reduce fatalities on its main inner city artery, Atlantic Avenue, are not entirely welcome.
  • World Bank cancel US$1.2bn Padma Bridge loan
    July 6, 2012
    A loan worth US$1.20billion for the Padma Multipurpose Bridge project has been cancelled by the World Bank (WB). The decision was said to have been taken as the Bank was not satisfied with the actions taken by the Bangladeshi government in regards to corruption allegations involving the bridge contract. A major engineering and construction company is alleged to have made improper payments to Bangladeshi government officials in order to secure the bridge contract. The World Bank loan, signed In April last y
  • Financing Portugal's road network
    April 12, 2012
    Following a government decision, a new model for the management and financing of the road infrastructures sector was defined in 2007 and is now being implemented The national road agency (Estradas de Portugal or EP, EPE) was transformed into a state-owned public company, Estradas de Portugal, SA (EP, SA), and a new body, the Institute for Road Infrastructures (InIR), was created with public functions of regulation and supervision of road infrastructures. InIR is now the Portuguese national road authorit