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Maendeleo Vijijini
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NEW YORK
Talks on funding the
construction of a six-lane highway got off on the right foot after the
Kenyan and US government and an engineering firm held a successful
meeting.
Elizabeth Littlefield, head of the US
government's Overseas Private Investment Corporation (Opic), and the
construction company signed a “letter of interest” regarding the
Nairobi-Mombasa highway project on the sidelines of the US-Africa
Business Forum in New York on Wednesday.
California-based
Bechtel, one of the world's largest engineering and construction
companies, is also involved in the financing discussions.
The US Export-Import Bank is simultaneously working with Bechtel to secure investment for the 485-kilometre expressway.
It is intended to speed up commerce and travel between Kenya's main port of Mombasa and cities throughout East Africa.
Opic's role in the emerging deal would be to insure Bechtel against breach of contract.
The Export-Import Bank would assist Bechtel in developing the project.
“With
the support of the US government agencies such as Opic and the
Export-Import Bank, we can provide solutions to move this critical
project forward quickly with a high standard of quality and safety,”
said Andrew Patterson, Bechtel’s regional president for Africa.
The
Obama administration's move to help Bechtel secure a deal to build the
road coincides with the opening in Nairobi of an Opic office.
The
agency's new regional headquarters in the Kenyan capital will
facilitate US businesses' participation in infrastructure development
throughout East Africa.
Opic is currently involved in several projects in Kenya.
It
announced on Wednesday a $4.1 million loan to Mawingu Networks, a
provider of solar-powered wireless Internet access in rural Kenya.
Microsoft has also helped finance Mawingu's effort to enable many more Kenyans to get online.
CREDIT: NATION
CREDIT: NATION
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