Skip to main content

Brazil draws up transport concession timetable

Brazil's federal government has drawn up a tender launch schedule for highway, railway, airport, waterway, and port dredging concessions. Feasibility studies for the country's upcoming concessions have already been completed and tenders are due to be launched in the fourth quarter, local paper Valor Econômico reported. To date, a total of 493 kilometres of sections of federal highway, from Paraná state's Lapa city to Santa Catarina state's Chapecó city, are waiting to be put out to tender. Additional highwa
March 19, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Brazil's federal government has drawn up a tender launch schedule for highway, railway, airport, waterway, and port dredging concessions.

Feasibility studies for the country's upcoming concessions have already been completed and tenders are due to be launched in the fourth quarter, local paper Valor Econômico reported.

To date, a total of 493 kilometres of sections of federal highway, from Paraná state's Lapa city to Santa Catarina state's Chapecó city, are waiting to be put out to tender. Additional highway stretches will be announced from June, planning minister Nelson Barbosa has said.

Current concession holders are interested in expanding the country's railway network in exchange for extensions to their concession contracts. The federal government is planning to evaluate their proposals shortly. Although the government is considering launching a tender for the Centro-Oeste integration railway (Fico), it has received provisional interest only from foreign parties and is currently awaiting local investors to get involved.

President Dilma Rousseff has confirmed that airport concessions in the state capitals of Porto Alegre (Rio Grande do Sul state), Florianópolis (Santa Catarina) and Salvador (Bahia) would be put out to tender in parallel with the restructuring of national airport authority Infraero. After privatising the most lucrative airports, Infraero is experiencing financial problems.

Tenders are also expected for waterways, where priority will be given to the north of Brazil. The federal government is currently developing plans for the Tapajós, Madeira and Tocantins rivers, as well as the Mercosul waterway in the south.

Related Content

  • Public Private Partnerships to gather pace in the US
    April 29, 2015
    Public Private Partnerships are set to play a big role in transportation funding as Andrew Bardin Williams discovers. The old joke goes that the road from New York to Chicago is paved with potholes. For decades, drivers from New York and New Jersey traveling across Pennsylvania to visit the Midwest have lambasted the Commonwealth’s roadways for their lack of smooth pavement.
  • US braces itself for congestion pain
    February 6, 2020
    Mary Scott Nabers, author of Inside the Infrastructure Revolution: A Roadmap for Building America, looks at how different US states are embracing the need for public transport investment
  • Tolls ‘on the rise as highway funding dries up’
    April 9, 2015
    The US-based Brookings Institution has commented on the highway funding debate in the US in a paper by Robert Puentes, a senior fellow with the Institution’s Metropolitan Policy Program He says that, as uncertainties abound over federal transportation spending and another shortfall in the Highway Trust Fund looms, states and localities are stepping up to address their infrastructure challenges head on. By raising gas taxes, launching ballot initiatives, and forging public-private partnerships, regions ar
  • First VMS installed on Gateway WA project
    August 19, 2015
    Australian signs manufacturer, A.D. Engineering International was selected by DownerMouchel to provide overhead variable message signs for the Gateway WA project, which aims to improve the safety and efficiency of one of Western Australia’s most important transport hubs around Perth airport. Gateway WA was selected as the alliance partner by Main Roads Western Australia to deliver the $1 billion Gateway WA Perth Airport and Freight Access Project on behalf of the Australian and Western Australian Governm