the instructions are shown in the document.
Vamos a ir preparando un borrador del próximo
newsletter de infraestructura, tomando como guía la edición que le enviamos a las empresas en años anteriores.
Busca qué oportunidades hay disponibles en Centralamerica, en especial Panamá, Costa Rica y Guatemala. Abajo te comparto los potenciales proyectos de los que se ha estado hablando.
Panama: The Panama Canal Water Management Strategy (£2bn), Central Government Water Plants (£500M), Panama – David rail project (£4.5bn), Schools, Waste Management.
Guatemala: The Aurora Airport, Government City/building; Road Work, Ports renovation, Hospitals, Urban Train Guatemala City (£750M); Teleferic Guatemala City.
Costa Rica: Projects National Emergency Commission (£500M BCIE); Urban Train San Jose (£1bn); Refurbishment Kid’s Hospital; Liberia, Limon and other airports.
Puedes buscar mayor información y noticias en las páginas de las multilaterales como
BCIE, World Bank, CAF y IDB.
Abajo te comparto un ejemplo de lo que hizo antes en el 2021 y necesito que me hagas uno asi parecido para este ano.
*Para que tengas un mejor entendimiento. Este es un case study. La embajada de reino unido , departamento de comercio necesita hacer un infrastructure newsletter de centralamerica y republica dominicana para este ano.
Infrastructure Opportunities Newsletter: Central America & The Dominican Republic Issue: April 2021 |
Welcome to the second edition of our quarterly infrastructure newsletter, which aims to keep you up to date with the main procurement processes in the infrastructure sector across Central America and the Dominican Republic, covering a wide range of areas such as water, rail, social infrastructure, road works, among others. The Department for International Trade remains keen to support British expertise in the sector, and if there is any particular interest in these projects, please do not hesitate to contact us.
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Panama’s infrastructure agenda for 2021 contemplates an aggressive plan for new projects that will be procured through typical tenders, turnkey, and public-private partnerships. The government plans to invest more than US$1.5bn in infrastructure development that will be divided between the Ministry of Public Works, the Metro Authority, state electric company Etesa, Tocumen International Airport’s state operator and mass transport authority Mi Bus, among others.
The infrastructure agenda will focus on 16 highway projects with an estimated value of US$1.9 billion, including the expansion of 3 major highways, bridges, several overpasses, and the establishment of an Operations Centre for Road Maintenance. Six of these projects will break ground, and the rest are under construction.
The government plans to execute 118 small-medium infrastructure projects to strengthen its connectivity, competitiveness and boost economic growth. These projects include: · The construction of the Belize Bridge II. · Expansion of the CA-9 North and South highways. · Expansion of the main pier of the Santo Tomás de Castilla Port in Puerto Barrios. · Rehabilitation of the cargo airport in Puerto San José, Escuintla.
The Korea Development Co-Financing Facility for Central America and CABEI are financing Guatemala’s “Hospital Infrastructure and Equipment Investment Program” which involves the construction, expansion, and equipment of 5 new national hospitals located in Alta Verapaz, Chiquimula, Jutiapa, Mazatenango, and Sololá. This program is under its disbursement phase to carry out the technical and pre-investment studies.
The country will focus on the Sustainable Reconstruction Plan following the aftermath of the hurricanes Eta and Iota. Additionally, the government plans to improve the infrastructure for commercial logistics, which will lead to economic revitalization in the country and improve the transportation of goods with neighbouring countries.
According to sector forecasts, currently, there’s potential to start investments of around US$1,200 million for projects that would be completed by 2022 –this data corresponds to both public and private sectors, who expect the development of new projects for about US$600 million each. Some of the projects that are underway include a natural gas generation plant (with an investment of more than US$1,000 million), a wind farm and photovoltaic park. The Government of El Salvador bets on logistics and infrastructure development in the eastern part of the country to maximize the connectivity of goods and services within Central America. Most of the projects below are in the feasibility study phase. · · · · · ·
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