Skip to main content

Colombian government releases funds for road concessions

The Colombian government is to release funds of US$12.27 billion from the national budget for the Autopistas de la Prosperidad road programme, involving nine road concessions. Concession holders will invest US$7.4 billion into these projects; since monies from tolls will be insufficient to complete all works, the government will inject further funds of US$23.2 billion over the next decade. Ministers have stressed the importance of this road infrastructure and the need to speed up the process. This news
September 25, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
The Colombian government is to release funds of US$12.27 billion from the national budget for the Autopistas de la Prosperidad road programme, involving nine road concessions. Concession holders will invest US$7.4 billion into these projects; since monies from tolls will be insufficient to complete all works, the government will inject further funds of US$23.2 billion over the next decade.

Ministers have stressed the importance of this road infrastructure and the need to speed up the process. This news is significant as it will facilitate the tender for the first five concessions of Autopistas de la Prosperidad, involving 580 kilometres of motorways that will be launched on 30 September 2013. These five projects include Cordoba-Sucre, Santander-Cundinamarca-Tolima and Caldas-Risaralda, as well as a connection to northern Colombia and an Antioquia-Pacific Ocean road. Four additional concessions of 680 kilometres, including two linked to the Autopista al Mar motorway as well as the Rio Magdalena and the Caucasia concessions, are in the pre-qualification stage and will be put out to tender in December 2013 or January 2014.

Related Content

  • M6 Toll road ‘could open for free’ to ease congestion
    June 27, 2013
    The UK’s underused M6 toll road could be opened free to drivers stuck in congested traffic on the M6, it has been revealed. Toll road operators Midland Expressway have reportedly offered to clear the path to help relieve traffic jams on the M6 if the Government releases it from its commitment to part-finance the M54 link road. The company, a subsidiary of Australian company Macquarie Atlas Roads, has debts of £1.03 billion, which mature in 2015, and as part of its 50-year concession agreement would have to
  • Mexican government unveils infrastructure plan
    April 30, 2014
    The Mexican government has unveiled a US$587 billion national infrastructure plan for 2014-18. "The national infrastructure plan includes 743 programs," said finance and public credit minister Luis Videgaray during the plan's presentation.
  • Sweden plans major infrastructure investments 2014-2025
    April 9, 2014
    The Swedish government has presented planned investments as part of its national transport plan 2014-2025, which is based on an infrastructure proposal from 2012. A total of US$80.32 billion is to be invested in the transport network, US$23.7 billion in the operations and maintenance of roads, US$13 billion in the operation and maintenance of railways, and US$43 billion will go towards developing the transport system. The government is to invest US$30.6 billion in new railway infrastructure, including
  • Potholes and road safety a bigger priority for future government, says survey
    April 10, 2015
    The next government must make road safety a top priority, with more than 50 per cent of motorists believing the current administration had not made the issue enough of a concern, according to a survey conducted by the Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM). A total of 2,156 people took part in the IAM survey throughout March 2015. The number one gripe amongst those who answered the poll said reducing the number of potholes should be the government’s number one action point, with 70 per cent of respondents