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ADB's largest-ever financing project to bring Yunnan, Vietnam closer

By in Travel on

Last week the Asian Development Bank (ADB) announced plans to finance a US$1.1 billion highway project that will connect the Vietnamese capital of Hanoi with Yunnan province via a 244-kilometer (151 mile) highway. The road is the largest single financing project by the ADB to date.

At present, travel times for passenger cars and trucks traveling from Kunming to Hanoi are two and three days, respectively. After the road in Vietnam is completed, the trip between the two cities will take less than a day. Completion of the highway is projected to take place in 2012.

Hanoi and Lao Cai province – on the Vietnamese border with China – are part of the Haiphong transport corridor that is expected to provide economic opportunities to impoverished northwest Vietnam plus greater access to social services for communities near the highway.

The road will also give Kunming greater access to the port of Haiphong, the closest seaport to the Spring City. This will make it easier for companies in Kunming and Yunnan to ship goods internationally. Similarly, agricultural and maritime products from Vietnam will have greater access to Yunnan, Sichuan and elsewhere in China's landlocked west.

The highway is also expected to be a boon to tourism between northern Vietnam and Yunnan, both of which are home to major tourist destinations such as Ha Long Bay and Sa Pa in Vietnam and Xishuangbanna, Dali, Lijiang and Shangri-la (Zhongdian) in Yunnan.

Traffic on the existing roads between Hanoi and Lao Cai has been averaging an annual increase of 12 percent in recent years. More than 5.5 million vehicles are projected to use the new road in 2012, with traffic expected to triple to 17 million over the following ten years.

Related article:

Yunnan moves toward greater integration with Vietnam

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