Kampala–Mpigi Expressway Explained

Country:UGA
Kampala–Mpigi Expressway
Length Mi:22
History:Designated in 2020
Expected completion in 2023
Direction A:North
Terminus A:Busega
Junction:Kyengera
Nsangi
Direction B:South
Terminus B:Mpigi

The Kampala–Mpigi Expressway, also Busega–Mpigi Expressway, is a four-lane, dual carriage highway under construction in the Central Region of Uganda, connecting, Kampala, the capital city, and Mpigi, the headquarters of Mpigi District.[1]

Location

The road starts at Busega, a neighborhood in Rubaga Division in the city of Kampala. It continues in a southwesterly direction, through Kyengera, Nabbingo and Nsangi to end at Mpigi, a distance of approximately 28.5km (17.7miles). The approximate coordinates of the road, near the town of Maya, are 0°15'54.0"N, 32°25'49.0"E (Latitude:0.265012; Longitude:32.430288). The expressway is a component of the Kampala–Masaka Road.

Background

The current road is a two-lane single carriageway in good condition. The government of Uganda plans to widen the road to a four-lane dual carriage highway, as part of its efforts to decongest Kampala. The construction is planned to be funded under a public-private partnership arrangement.[2]

The design includes four major interchanges at Nabbingo, Nsangi, Maya and Lugala. These interchanges will allow connection with the Kampala Northern Bypass Highway and the Entebbe–Kampala Expressway. The government of Uganda has secured funding of US$91 million (UShs322 billion) to fund the 23km (14miles) section between Busega and Mpigi. The 9.5km (05.9miles) section between Kibuye and Busega is to be expanded by China Communications Construction Company (CCCC), with funding from the Exim Bank of China, once CCCC has completed the Entebbe-Kampala Expressway.[3]

Timetable

In 2014, the China Communications Construction Company, which was also commissioned to build the Entebbe–Kampala Expressway, was contracted to construct an interchange at Busega which connects the two expressways. To save money and time, the same contractor was hired to construct the section between Kibuye and Busega, measuring about 9km (06miles).[4] In December 2016, the Daily Monitor reported that construction was expected to begin in 2018[1] and last three years.[5]

In July 2019, after delays, the construction contract was awarded to a consortium of Chinese companies, that includes China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC) and China Railway 19th Bureau Group Company Limited. Construction was expected to last 36 months, with commissioning planned for the second half of 2022.[6] Construction began in May 2020 and completion was expected sometime in 2023.[7]

Due to delays occasioned by the COVID-19 pandemic, compensation disputes and other challenges, only 15 percent of the work had been completed as of March 2022. A new completion date is now given as being 2025.[8]

Construction costs

Application for funding has been made to the African Development Bank (AfDB).[9] The estimated cost of the road was budgeted at approximately US$100 million, as reported by the Daily Monitor.[10] The cost is now budgeted at US$91 million (loan from AfDB) plus $41 million contributed by the government of Uganda for a total of US$132 million.[11]

In July 2019, the Daily Monitor newspaper quoted the contract price at Shs547 billion (approx. US$150 million), partly borrowed from the African Development Bank (AfDB).[6] The New Vision, another Ugandan newspaper reported that the entire construction cost was funded by an AfDB loan.[12]

Developments

As of November 2023, only 30 percent of the civil work had been completed. The delay is blamed on the swampy topography, the Covid-19 pandemic, "resistance and legal battles involving at least 490 Project Affected Persons and rejection of approved compensation by others".[13] [14]

See also

External links

0.265°N 32.4303°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kampala-Mpigi Expressway project kicks off in 2018 . . 30 December 2016 . Frederic . Musisi . Kampala . 28 July 2017.
  2. Web site: 10 February 2016 . 10 February 2016 . UNRA . Uganda Roads PPP Projects: Kampala–Mpigi Expressway. Uganda National Roads Authority (UNRA) . Kampala .
  3. Web site: Kibuye-Mpigi expressway stuck on government's to-do list 7 years later . 24 January 2018 . 26 January 2018 . . Isaac . Mufumba . Kampala.
  4. Web site: Prisca . Wanyenya . Kampala . UNRA Announces Changes on Kampala-Entebbe Express Highway . 9 May 2014 . . 28 July 2017.
  5. Web site: 28 July 2017 . Busega-Mpigi expressway to cut travel time to 20 minutes . Taddeo Bwambale . Kampala. . 30 December 2016.
  6. Web site: 12 July 2019 . Shs540 Billion Mpigia–Busega Expressway Awarded To Chinese Consortium . . 12 July 2019 . Frederic Musisi . Kampala.
  7. Web site: Works On Busega-Mpigi Expressway Finally Kick Off . 27 May 2020 . . Sadat Mbogo . 6 June 2020 . Kampala.
  8. Web site: How The Busega–Mpigi Expressway Will Ease Transport, Spur Economic Development . ChimpReports . 3 March 2022 . Busein Similu . 4 March 2022 . Kampala, Uganda.
  9. Web site: Kampala–Mpigi & Mirama Hills Bridge (Kagitumba)–Kayonza–Rusumo Project (Rwanda/Uganda): Status - Pipeline . 28 October 2015 . 10 February 2016 . Abidjan . African Development Bank (AfDB) . AfDB.
  10. Web site: 10 February 2016 . UNRA to get Shs3 trillion for funding new road projects . 16 January 2015 . Abdulaziizi . Tumusiime . . Kampala.
  11. Web site: 29 December 2016 . Chimpreports.com . Uganda, ADB Move to Finance Busega-Mpigi 4-Lane Expressway . 28 July 2017 . Paul Mugume . Kampala.
  12. Web site: . UNRA signs contract to complete Busega-Mpigi Expressway . 11 July 2019 . 13 July 2019 . David Lumu . Kampala.
  13. Web site: 23 November 2023 . Parliament alarmed at slow work on Kampala-Mpigi expressway . . . 11 February 2024 . Kampala, Uganda.
  14. Web site: Traffic Diversion as Busega-Mpigi Expressway Alignment Works Begin . ChimpReports . 22 January 2024 . Geoffrey Omara . 11 February 2024 . Kampala, Uganda.