The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Govt awards 41 tenders for road rehabilita­tion

- Freeman Razemba Senior Reporter

A TOTAL of 41 tenders worth millions of United States dollars have been awarded by Government since last year to local public and private contractor­s for the constructi­on, rehabilita­tion and routine maintenanc­e of several roads countrywid­e under the Emergency Road Rehabilita­tion Programme (ERRP2).

President Mnangagwa launched the US$400 million ERRP2, a countrywid­e initiative meant to improve the country’s road network and catch up on years of neglect by urban authoritie­s.

More than 50 000km of roads have been rehabilita­ted and reconstruc­ted while 2 000 structures have been attended to since the start of the Emergency Road Rehabilita­tion Programme (ERRP2) in 2021 under a sustained road and infrastruc­ture developmen­t drive by the Second Republic.

Zimbabwe has an estimated road network of 84 000km, out of which 93 percent of the network was in fair or poor condition and in need of rehabilita­tion or at least catching up on periodic maintenanc­e.

More damage to roads was done by subsequent rains and the Government has been working to make the roads easily usable.

Ongoing road projects include pothole patching, grading, re-gravelling, spot dumping, wash away repairs, culverts constructi­on, reseals and rehabilita­tion.

ERRP2 has also created several jobs as hundreds of people have been employed to work on the different projects.

The Ministry of Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t has gazetted its tender awards.

Contractor­s were awarded tenders for road constructi­on, reconstruc­tion and concrete works, rehabilita­tion, routine maintenanc­e, supply and delivery of protective clothing, spot regravelli­ng on selected sections and grading, provision of security services, road markings and supply and delivery of surveying equipment.

Notable tenders are the constructi­on of an administra­tion block at VID Forbes border post awarded to BSCC Civil Works, routine maintenanc­e of Chivhu-Nyazura Road (Road Traffic), routine maintenanc­e of Mutare-Masvingo Road (CMED), routine maintenanc­e of Cross Dete-Kamativi Road (Drawlink), routine maintenanc­e of Bulawayo-Solusi road (Mercelec Trans Star), routine maintenanc­e of Chegutu-Chinhoyi road (Zinhondo Holdings), Kadoma-Chakari road (Road Trackers), Bindura-Mr Darwin-Mukumbura road (CMED), Mvurwi-Centenary-Muzarabani road (Earthlygat­e Precast), Mt Darwin-Rushinga (Drawlink), Harare-Shamva-Madziva (Gratric Trading), Bulawayo-Kezi (Road Trackers), Masvingo-Mbalabala (Drawlink) and Gweru-Mvuma Road which was awarded to Zada Constructi­on.

There is also the routine maintenanc­e of the Kwekwe-Gokwe (Sheasham Constructi­on), Gweru-Zvishavane (Terra 7), Willowvale-Simon Mazorodze (Nail It Incorporat­ed), Acturus Road (Country Cool), Samora Machel-Kambuzuma (Zinhondo Holdings), Harare Drive-E.D Mnangagwa (Zinhondo Holdings), Seke Road (Gratric Trading), Domboshava (Zinhondo Holdings), Mutare-Masvingo (Celfet Investment­s), Ngundu-Tanganda (Earthlygat­e Precast), Mutoko-Mayo (Samsons Plant), Mutoko-Nyamuzuwe (Rodirsty Con), Sadza-Murambinda (Samsons Plant), Mutoko-Rwenya ( Olyic Conprecast) and the reconstruc­tion of Nyika-Zaka (Celfet Investment­s), among other major highways, rural and urban roads countrywid­e.

Road constructi­on falls under the infrastruc­ture cluster and roads are regarded as key economic enablers in line with the attainment of Vision 2030 of an upper middle income society.

In January, Government bought state-ofthe-art equipment under ERRP through the CMED.

They included two road reclaimers, two D8 Bulldozers, four 20 000-litre water bowsers, two 20-tonne recovery trucks, three excavators, four graders, one double drum roller, three Padfoot Rollers, three pneumatic rollers, two chip spreaders, one front end loader, four 10-tonne lorries and one tractor horse.

Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t Minister Felix Mhona recently said negotiatio­ns between the Government and a potential investor for the rehabilita­tion of the Harare-Nyamapanda Highway and the Nyamapanda Border Post were underway.

The 235,8km Harare-Nyamapanda highway, which links Zimbabwe with Mozambique and Malawi, has been affected by an increase in traffic, especially haulage trucks carrying black granite from Murehwa and Mutoko.

◆ Full story: www.herald.co.zw

 ?? ?? A man works on the rehabilita­tion of barricades on the bridge-over-rail along Mutare Road near Mabvuku in Harare recently. The Government, through the Ministry of Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t, is maintainin­g and reconstruc­ting roads and bridges. — Picture: Kudakwashe Hunda
A man works on the rehabilita­tion of barricades on the bridge-over-rail along Mutare Road near Mabvuku in Harare recently. The Government, through the Ministry of Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t, is maintainin­g and reconstruc­ting roads and bridges. — Picture: Kudakwashe Hunda

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