Skip to main content

Nicaragua is planning major road investments

The Nicaraguan Government is setting out major plans for road infrastructure development. The country's master plan for road infrastructure envisages work to a total of 4,200km of main roads across the country. This programme is expected to cost in the order of US$5.20 billion, according to pre-feasibility studies carried out by Korea Expressway Corporation (KEC). Funding is being sought at present by the Nicaraguan Government, which is in discussion with a number of bodies.
March 30, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
The Nicaraguan Government is setting out major plans for road infrastructure development. The country's master plan for road infrastructure envisages work to a total of 4,200km of main roads across the country. This programme is expected to cost in the order of US$5.20 billion, according to pre-feasibility studies carried out by Korea Expressway Corporation (KEC). Funding is being sought at present by the Nicaraguan Government, which is in discussion with a number of bodies.

There are 76 motorway sections that will require 1,100kms of new road or widened roads. Along some other sections improvement works will only be needed. The plan is for 20 years with a first phase due to be finalised in 2023 and a second phase in 2033. It will cover six large sections, including three from north to south. Along this sector is the Penas Blancas-El Guasaule road that needs widening to four lanes along some parts and to six lanes along some others, such as the road between Managua and Granada. Work needs to be done along the motorway between Bluefields and Puerto Cabezas. The IADB and the government are working on financing for the Rosita-Bonanza and Pantasma-Wiwili sections. Around $2 billion should be secured by 2023. So far $600 million has been secured and the funding for a further $400 million is under discussion.

Related Content

  • Highway construction to be completed for South East Nigeria
    June 11, 2018
    Further financing will be required to complete construction work for Nigeria’s vital East-West highway project. Work is being carried out on sections of the highway between Warri and Port Harcourt and from Eket to Ikot Akan and Atan Ikpe. The former stretch is being handled by Setraco Nigeria, while the latter is being handled by Reynolds Construction Company. However a further US$277.4 million will be required to fund the work, which involves widening the highway so that it features two lanes in either dir
  • Highway widening project for the US
    April 19, 2018
    A highway widening project in the US state of New Hampshire is being assisted by the use of a gravity-fed asphalt paver. The widening work is being carried out as part of an upgrade for a 32km stretch of I-93, which was started eight years ago. The work is being carried out for the New Hampshire Department of Transportation (NHDOT) on a section of the highway between Exits 1 and 5 from the Massachusetts Stateline to Manchester, NH. According to NHDOT, the project involves widening I-93 from two lanes in
  • Japan investing in Ugandan roads
    January 31, 2014
    Japanese investment is helping develop Ugandan infrastructure. Construction of the New Nile Bridge is being part-financed by the Japanese Government. Some US$90 million for the dual-lane bridge is being provided through the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA). The bridge forms part of the important Northern Transport Corridor of East Africa, which runs from the Port of Mombasa in Kenya through Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi to the Democratic Republic of Congo. This route is vital for Uganda’s economy, as
  • Bolivia's Santa Cruz road corridor connector project
    December 22, 2016
    Bolivia’s ambitious Santa Cruz road corridor connector project is providing an important link for the country - Gordon Feller writes The World Bank has been organising a US$230 million loan to upgrade a vital connector linking the country’s northern and southern transit corridors. Meanwhile, another $100 million is coming from Bolivia’s government.