Skip to main content

European Bank backs Tblisi metro modernisation

A loan of €75 million will improve commuters’ journeys in Georgia’s capital
By David Arminas May 11, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Tblisi’s 1.2 million population to get improved metro (© Evgeny Dontsov | Dreamstime)

Georgia’s capital Tbilisi will get a €65 million loan from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and €10 million from the Green Climate Fund for metro modernisation work.

Some of the money will go towards purchasing new rolling stock – 40 cars – as well as the modernisation of a depot and a tunnel. Tbilisi has a population of almost 1.2 million.

The Green Climate Fund is a fund established within the framework of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, an international environmental treaty adopted in 1992 and with administrative offices in Incheon, South Korea.

The investment is part of EBRD Green Cities fund and a follow-on investment under Tbilisi’s Green City Action Plan which identifies the city’s main environmental challenges, one of which is air quality. It is also the first project to be co-financed by the Green City Action Plan under EBRD Green Cities.

The EBRD said that supporting vital infrastructure is a key element of the bank’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, while continuing to prioritise green and sustainable investment.

The EBRD recently launched its Vital Infrastructure Support Programme as part of its response to the coronavirus pandemic to guarantee the operation and development of crucial infrastructure supplies and services. Infrastructure investments are vital for the local economy and create or secure jobs.

“The EBRD has been supporting Tbilisi's municipal transport infrastructure for several years now. We are grateful that despite the difficult economic conditions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, the Bank's support for Georgia’s economy and its citizens remains strong,” said Kakha Kaladze, mayor of Tbilisi.

“The modernisation of the Tbilisi metro will be a milestone in addressing the city’s key environmental challenges. The demand for quality public transport is high and such projects have an excellent environmental and social impact,” said Catarina Bjorlin Hansen, EBRD’s director for the Caucasus region.
 
Since the start of its operations in the country, the EBRD has invested over €3.7 billion in 249 projects in the financial, corporate, infrastructure and energy sectors. Around 87% of the investment has been in the private sector.

Related Content

  • President to unveil infrastructure funding initiative
    July 21, 2014
    President Obama is to unveil a new federal initiative to help cities and states find private financing for transportation infrastructure. The announcement comes as the White House looks to increase pressure on Congress, which this week is debating a short-term fix to the rapidly depleting highway trust fund that underwrites road and mass transit construction. Under the plan to be unveiled by Obama, the Department of Transportation will open a new investment centre designed to serve as a ‘one-stop sho
  • London’s mayor launches fund to help retire polluting diesel taxis
    July 28, 2017
    In the latest in a series of measures to clean up London’s toxic air, the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, and Transport for London (TfL) have launched a US£55 million (£42 million) fund to encourage the owners of the oldest, most polluting diesel black cabs to retire them from the Capital’s fleet. Taxis are a significant contributor to London’s toxic air quality, and are responsible for 16 per cent of NOx and 26 per cent of Particulate Matter (PM) road transport emissions in central London. From today, the own
  • London ‘needs next generation of infrastructure to compete’
    February 28, 2017
    Improving the capital’s infrastructure, through Crossrail 2, a new runway at Heathrow and East London river crossings, is key to the city’s future success and ability to compete, according to the latest CBI/CBRE London Business Survey. More than eight in ten of London’s companies see Crossrail 2 as being central to the capital’s successful expansion. Meanwhile, a similar number of firms think sticking to the Government’s current timetables for building Heathrow’s third runway is vital to London’s attractive
  • Victorian government to implement high capacity signalling on new rail line
    July 18, 2017
    The Victorian government, Australia has awarded CPB Contractors and Bombardier Transportation the contract to deliver the US$790 million (AU$1 billion) Rail Systems Alliance in Melbourne, which includes the roll-out of a 55 kilometre long high capacity signalling (HCS) and communications system. HCS allows trains to safely run closer together, meaning they can run more often. The technology will enable trains every two to three minutes, creating a ‘turn-up-and-go’ train network for Melbourne. The signalling