All Africa Articles
Cameroon has received a €73.4 million (US$80 million) loan from the African Development Bank to build a bridge across the River Ntem, which forms a natural boundary with Equatorial Guinea.
All 41 construction workers trapped in a tunnel in India’s Uttarakhand state after it partially collapsed have been rescued.
Egypt-based construction company Orascom has seen its order backlog rise to a record US$7 billion, despite a decline in revenue which it blamed on the devaluation of the Egyptian pound.
Ministers within Nigeria’s government have discussed how to get a nationwide concrete road building programme off the ground, at an initial cost of $35 billion.
Multinational company announces another move away from cement
Atlas Copco have unveiled a change in corporate brand identity
New engine and controls among updated features
China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has been called the world’s most ambitious infrastructure scheme
Parent company of Case Construction Equipment and New Holland to focus on New York Stock Exchange
Only 47% of projects and portfolios worldwide are achieving their time, cost and quality objectives
Egyptian contractor Orascom Construction has won two new contracts with the National Authority for Tunnels to build new transport projects in the country.
New model will be available in markets across the world
The fund will invest in a pool of energy transition and project loans, such as renewable energy and related clean technologies
Profit for Cat’s Construction Industries’ profit hits US$1.847 billion in the third quarter of 2023
World Bank says construction tech could be used to help cut emissions
A deal was signed the same day between the government and state-owned fund CDG to finance the new stadium
A new report reveals that disputed costs amount to more than a third of project capital expenditure value
Major OEM has released its financial results for the third quarter of 2023
World Cup 2030 host countries could be linked by Africa-Europe rail project
Loans that demand natural resources in return for money to fund infrastructure and construction projects are a “disaster” for Africa and countries on the continent should stop taking them, argue the IMF and African Development Bank.