Skip to main content

World Bank funds Yemen highway project

The World Bank has announced a US$133.54 million grant to support the Government of Yemen’s ambitious plan to connect the northern and southern parts of the country with a 710 kilometre highway. The largest ever infrastructure project in Yemen’s history will play a vital role in the country’s transition by targeting the root causes of instability, such as lack of access to economic opportunities and poor national integration, and rebuilding the country’s social and economic base. “This is more than just
June 6, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
The 2000 World Bank has announced a US$133.54 million grant to support the Government of Yemen’s ambitious plan to connect the northern and southern parts of the country with a 710 kilometre highway. The largest ever infrastructure project in Yemen’s history will play a vital role in the country’s transition by targeting the root causes of instability, such as lack of access to economic opportunities and poor national integration, and rebuilding the country’s social and economic base.

“This is more than just a road project, it will make a significant contribution to future stability and growth,” said World Bank President Jim Yong Kim from neighbouring Saudi Arabia, where he is on the first stop of a four-day visit to the region. “Development is essential right now in Yemen and across the region to give meaning to political achievements and show what peace can deliver – which is why we are mobilising resources and building partnerships to support more of these transformational projects.”

The grant will finance the construction of the first, critical section of the highway. The bank’s Corridor Highway Project, combined with a parallel US$320 million project financed by the Saudi Fund for Development, will build 140 kilometres of road linking the port city of Aden with Taiz. This initial stretch of highway will connect two areas of the former South and North Yemen, bridging one of the country’s main political fault lines, and cross three governorates where one fifth of the country’s poor are located.

The bank’s Corridor Highway project is expected to be completed within three to four years, and create around 4,000 jobs (the equivalent of 1.28 million person/days of work). The large-scale construction will also offer opportunities for Yemeni contractors and the providers of various goods and services. In addition, the project will include training for the Ministry of Public Works and Highways to expand their capacity to manage the new highway.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Hyperloop: from sci-fi to transport policy
    April 16, 2020
    The future is here. While it has long looked like something from a sci-fi movie, Graham Anderson investigates a technology whose time might have come.
  • Satellite-based truck tolling provides Slovak solution
    August 12, 2015
    Slovakia opted for a satellite-based tolling system and following last year’s enlargement it now has the European Union’s largest truck user charging system.
  • USDOT awards infrastructure grants to 18 projects
    September 9, 2016
    US Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx has announced 18 infrastructure projects across the country that will receive federal grants as part of the new FASTLANE program. The grants, totalling nearly US$800 million, will be combined with other funding from federal, state, local and private sources to support US$3.6 billion in infrastructure investment in 15 states and the District of Columbia.
  • EU support for transport links in Vienna, Sweden, Finland
    November 15, 2013
    The European Union will use over US$15 million from the Ten-T programme to co-finance two initiatives for the extension of Vienna’s tri-modal port container handling capacity and a project to upgrade the transport link between northern Sweden and western Finland. The project to extend Vienna’s tri-modal port will receive funds of over US$7 million and includes studies and works which will help eliminate major bottlenecks in the port's transfer and combination capacity. The studies will plan and design