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Bangladesh signs PPP contract for Dhaka Bypass

Dhaka, Jan 3 (UNB) - A consortium of companies from China - Sichuan Road and Bridge
Group, Shamim Enterprise Ltd, and UDC Construction Limited—have signed a concession
contract with the government of Bangladesh to upgrade the Dhaka Bypass under a public-private
partnership (PPP) arrangement.

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) acted as financial advisor on the transaction to the Public–
Private Partnership Authority (PPPA) of Bangladesh.

Under the contract signed with the Ministry of Roads and Bridges, a four-lane tollway and a two-
lane service road will be added to the Joydevpur–Debogram–Bhulta–Madanpur Road (N-105)
section of the expressway, ADB said on Thursday.

The 48-kilometer (km) project will provide a major arterial connection between the industrial
zone northeast of Dhaka and national highway N1 connecting to the port city of Chattogram, as
well as to N2, N3, and N4 highways leading to other major cities.

The consortium will design, build, finance, operate, and maintain the tolled expressway over a
25-year concession period, and will be able to charge tolls based on vehicle type.

The Government of Bangladesh will offer viability gap funding of 3.1 billion taka and a
minimum revenue guarantee to the consortium to optimize the cost of financing.

The contract also provides the government with a share of revenues generated by the consortium
over a certain threshold.

“This project brings a new dimension to public service delivery in Bangladesh. It is the first
access-controlled expressway in the country,” said Chief Executive Officer of PPPA Syed Afsor
H. Uddin.

He said this landmark transaction will pave the way for a pipeline of national expressways across
Bangladesh.
“ADB aims to accelerate road development in Bangladesh while minimizing the financing and
operational burden and bringing in a diverse set of internationally renowned infrastructure
developers, operators, and financial institutions,” said the Head of ADB’s Office of Public–
Private Partnership (OPPP) Yoji Morishita.

“The Government of Bangladesh establishes the objectives of the infrastructure as well as some
credit supports to tackle the traffic challenge, while the private sector takes responsibility for
meeting the objectives. The Dhaka Bypass is the first step in our strategy to bring Bangladesh
roads to the global market based on the PPP model.”

ADB’s OPPP also provided legal support for this transaction and helped to develop a concession
contract template for road PPPs through the Asia Pacific Project Preparation Facility (AP3F), a
multi-donor trust fund managed by ADB.

This project marks the first successful collaboration between ADB’s transaction advisory
services and AP3F.

ADB has been working with the Government of Bangladesh for over 5 years to transform the
country’s roads by making them a bankable asset class attractive to international investors, as has
happened in other sectors such as the independent power producer sector.

ADB’s OPPP is also the transaction advisor to PPPA on the 13.5-km Rampura–Amulia–Demra
Expressway in Dhaka and in December 2018 was appointed transaction advisor for the
approximately 210-km Dhaka Chattogram Expressway, the busiest road artery for passenger and
freight in the country.

ADB has long supported PPPs and in 2014 established the OPPP to provide independent
transactional advice and develop broader PPP knowledge and expertise in the region. ADB has
also pioneered the AP3F, a $73 million trust fund supported by the governments of Japan,
Canada, and Australia, to provide project preparation, project definition, and capacity-building
support to governments for PPP projects.
ADB is committed to achieving a prosperous, inclusive, resilient, and sustainable Asia and the
Pacific, while sustaining its efforts to eradicate extreme poverty. Established in 1966, it is owned
by 67 members—48 from the region.

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