Skip to main content

Algeria to engage Japanese government over dispute with Cojaal

The Algerian government is now talking directly to the Japanese government in an effort to resolve a dispute with sacked Japanese highways consortium Cojaal, In 2006, Cojaal won a US$5 billion deal to build the 359km eastern section of Algeria’s proposed 900km East-West Highway within 40 months. Algeria divided the contract into three sections, with the Chinese company Citic-CRCC winning the central and western sections, which in total was to cost around $6 billion.
January 14, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
The Algerian government is now talking directly to the Japanese government in an effort to resolve a dispute with sacked Japanese highways consortium Cojaal,

In 2006, Cojaal won a US$5 billion deal to build the 359km eastern section of Algeria’s proposed 900km East-West Highway within 40 months. Algeria divided the contract into three sections, with the Chinese company Citic-CRCC winning the central and western sections, which in total was to cost around $6 billion.

The East-West Highway runs along the Mediterranean area of Algeria, with the eastern section running from the province of Bourdj Bou Arreridj to the Tunisian border. The road will drastically reduce the time of up to three days to drive across northern Algeria.

Cojaal - the Consortium Japonais Pour l'Autoroute Algérienne - is a joint venture comprising five of Japan’s largest companies: Japan’s two largest contractors 2809 Kajima and 2808 Taisei, general contractors 2811 Hazama and Nishimatsu as well as the trading house 4081 Itochu.

According to %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal information from Kajima Visit www.kajima.com Website false http://www.kajima.com/news_events/special_features/vol2/vol2-1.html false false%>, Cojaal was to build a six-lane motorway with three lanes on each side, 43 bridges on the main route and three tunnels. “It is one of the largest infrastructure projects ever to be undertaken by Japanese companies outside of Japan,” Kajima said at the time of the contract award.

Completion of the entire East-West Highway was originally scheduled for 2010 and most of it is completed, except for the eastern section, %$Linker: 2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 17854 0 oLinkExternal as reported Visit WH Story Page false /categories/road-highway-structures/news/work-to-restart-on-key-algerian-highway-section/ false false%> by 3260 World Highways in June. But last October, Algeria’s Minister of Public Works Abdelkader Kadi terminated the contract with Cojaal to build the eastern section’s final 84km after a part of the Djebel el Ouahch tunnel in Constantine constructed by COJAAL collapsed in January last year.

Algerian Press Service reported that Kadi said the last stretch of the eastern section will be awarded to other companies, but he gave no details of which firms stood to gain the work.

Kadi also said he was confident that a satisfactory outcome for both parties will be agreed before June. However, he noted that he was also confident that Cojaal would recognise its responsibility for the delays to work over several years and the tunnel problems.

Kadi confirmed that a 13km bypass, costing nearly $57 million, is being built to resolve traffic problems due to the collapse of the tunnel and should be operational by June.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • World of Asphalt 2019
    December 12, 2018
    Tomorrow is your last chance to save 35% when you register for World of Asphalt 2019! Register now to attend the asphalt industry’s largest trade show and educational conference on February 12-14, 2019. Find solutions from 450 Exhibitors who will display their newest products and innovations. There’s no better place to train your team than World of Asphalt. With over 120 sessions to choose from, your whole team will leave with the right tools to grow.
  • Wood you ride these? The Igorot tribe in the Philippines do
    June 22, 2015
    Wood you ride these? The Igorot tribe in the Philippines do Possibly the most eco-friendly bicycle is to be found in the Philippines, and they race them once a year, reaching speeds of nearly 40kph downhill – with no brakes. The bicycles are made entirely of wood, but the beauty is in the carving. Each cycle is a unique ornate cycle – hand-carved by its owner, a member of the Igorot tribe. The cycle race gathering is held in the town of Batad in the mountains of Luzon, the Philippines largest and m
  • Five things road construction crews should not do
    June 19, 2015
    Sometimes you need a sense of humour to complete a task. Sometimes that sense of humour can overstep the mark and not everyone will see the joke, as these five road construction site pictures show. Here are five things that construction crews should not do.
  • VIDEO footage shows bridge replacement project in Rhode Island
    October 10, 2014
    A time-lapse video has been released showing the rapid replacement of the Barton Corner Bridge in Rhode Island in the US. Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT) partnered with EarthCam to document the US$6.4 million rapid replacement of the Barton Corner Bridge. The construction project was completed during an 11-day period in August 2014 and can be seen in an exclusive time-lapse, released by RIDOT. Had RIDOT had used conventional methods, the bridge replacement would have taken two full constru