Skip to main content

AfDB approves funding for transport in Côte d'Ivoire, Mali and Tanzania

The African Development Bank Group (AfDB) has approved two major transport support and facilitation programmes for Tanzania, Côte d'Ivoire and Mali. Tanzania will receive a US$75.43-million African Development Fund concessional loan and a US$270.95-million African Development Bank loan to finance its Transport Sector Support Programme, which involves interventions in the country's roads, rail and air transport sub-sectors. Identified as a key part of the country's transport sector priorities to suppor
November 30, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
The African Development Bank Group (AfDB) has approved two major transport support and facilitation programmes for Tanzania, Côte d'Ivoire and Mali.

Tanzania will receive a US$75.43-million African Development Fund concessional loan and a US$270.95-million African Development Bank loan to finance its Transport Sector Support Programme, which involves interventions in the country's roads, rail and air transport sub-sectors.

Identified as a key part of the country's transport sector priorities to support economic development, the programme includes the rehabilitation and upgrading of nearly 500 kilometres of roads to bitumen standard in mainland Tanzania and Zanzibar Island; capacity building and construction of social infrastructure as well as studies in railway and air transport sub-sectors.

The project, to be implemented in five years, is estimated to cost US$384.29 million. The Bank's contribution represents 88% of total costs while the government will provide the remaining 12 per cent.

The Mali-Côte d'Ivoire Road Development and Transport Facilitation Project will receive a total of US$178.61 million for upgrading of road sections on the Bamako-San Pedro corridor between Mali and Côte d'Ivoire, which provides an alternative road to neighbouring hinterland or landlocked countries.

The funding is in response to the critical needs of opening up the production areas of the two countries and will assist the emergence of the Port of San Pedro in Côte d'Ivoire as a key transit port for neighbouring landlocked countries such as Mali and Burkina Faso. The project will connect the two countries via the Port of San Pedro, which will become a real transit port for Mali, Burkina Faso and the northern part of neighbouring Guinea and will also connect to the Eastern regions of Guinea and Liberia on completion.

Some of the project's deliverables include improved level of service on the corridor and increased traffic and trade between the two countries; reduced logistics and transportation costs; and enhanced living conditions of local populations and their access to basic social services.

The project, to be implemented in five years from March 2016 to December 2020, is estimated to cost US$233.18 million; the Bank's contribution represents 84.32 per cent of the total project cost.

Related Content

  • December 2, 2015
    EBRD and Ukraine Air Traffic Services agree on extended cooperation
    The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and the Ukrainian State Air Traffic Services Enterprise (UkSATSE) have agreed to extend their cooperation under an air navigation system modernisation project originally negotiated in 2012.
  • October 25, 2013
    Work begins on major southern Vietnam bridge
    Construction has begun on two-kilometre bridge spanning the Tien River in the Mekong Delta in southern Vietnam. The investment of US$145 million is funded by non-refundable aid from the Australian government, a loan from the Asia Development Bank and Vietnamese government capital. The cable-stayed Cao Lanh Bridge, which links Cao Lanh Town and Lap Vo District in Dong Thap Province, will have four lanes for motorised vehicles to run at a speed of 80 kilometres per hour and two other lanes for non-motoris
  • June 25, 2018
    Cost benefit analysis ‘can’t be carried out with a cookbook’
    There is far more to working out the worth of a project than simply filling in a few headings on a spreadsheet. David Crawford surveys some recent thinking from the US and Canada. Cost benefit analysis (CBA) “can’t be carried out with a cookbook”, warns US analyst Professor Robert J Brent. “ You can’t just get out a spreadsheet and fill in the data for all the headings. Each transport CBA should have something that is distinctive, in terms of location (for example, for a rural area), types of user
  • July 27, 2017
    UK Government Air Quality Plan – call for funding for FCEVs
    Following the release of the UK Government’s final Air Quality Plan, in which it announced that it will ban all petrol and diesel vehicles (including hybrids) from 2040, ITM Power says this represents an historic first step towards cleaner and greener transport in the UK. However, it is calling on the UK Government to provide equivalent financial support for fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEV) infrastructure as it has already provided for plug-in battery electric vehicle (BEV) infrastructure. The company, wh