2.3 Burundi Road Network
Burundi has a road network of nearly 12,000 kilometers. According to the Highways Authority, the inland road network consists of a network of 4,456 km of classified roads (i.e., the maintenance of the Highways Office), including 22 national roads with a linear 1952 km and 91 provincial roads with a total linear of 2522 km. Of the classified roads, 1647 km of roads are paved, compared to 305 km unpaved.
Three categories of roads are identified. First, the national roads (RN) that connect provincial leaders with each other and with the borders. Then comes the 2,522 km provincial roads that connect the chiefs of the communes with each other and with the provincial chiefs. Finally, there are communal roads of a length of 2,587 kilometers, very strategic, which connect hills, municipalities and provinces. The unclassified network, which is the responsibility of local authorities, comprises 6,150 km of roads of communal interest and agricultural trails, and 462 km of road inside Bujumbura. (Source: link)
Most of the roads were built between the 1960s and 1990s. Natural disasters, especially with landslides, the civil war that lasted nearly fifteen years, and the lack of maintenance have damaged the network.
In terms of quality, according to the Office of Roads, 17% of national roads are in very good condition, 11% in good condition, 26% in average condition and 46% in poor condition. Of the provincial roads, 8.6 km by 2522 km are paved and in very good condition, the rest being in poor condition (65% of the roads). Despite maintenance problems, more than 1500 km or nearly 80% of the linear of national roads is paved. Some localities, however very strategic economically, are difficult to reach. For roads whose responsibility for maintenance lies with local authorities, a significant part is in deplorable condition, as the municipalities do not have enough budget allocated to this task.
Roads are expensive for the taxpayer. For example, only one km of the coated pavement of the Kirundo-Gasenyi section on the RN14 cost $466,111.97 for Muyinga-Cankuzo one km is estimated at $5,553,387 the coated km of Nyanza Lake-Mabanda-Mugina on the RN3 is equivalent to $1,230,897
Burundi is a landlocked country and its trade, both local and international, depends mainly on the road network. In fact, 80% of the country's trade takes place internationally, compared to 20% for the national level.
According to the Highways Office, three main Corridors connect Burundi to the international ports of Mombasa and Dar-Es-Salaam respectively in Kenya and Tanzania. This is the northern corridor that connects Bujumbura to Mombasa via the cities of Nairobi in Kenya, Kampala in Uganda and Kigali in Rwanda for about 2040 km; the central corridor that connects Bujumbura to Dar-Es-Salam via Kobero for a distance of 1630 km. Finally, the north-south corridor connects Rwanda (Bugarama) to Tanzania (Kigoma) via the borders of Ruhwa and Mugina. The latter is new and replaces the southern corridor via Lake Tanganyika. The length of Burundi's road network on these corridors is summarized in the following table.
Corridor |
Linear |
Number of Routes |
---|---|---|
North |
116 Km |
1 |
Central |
238 Km |
5 |
North - South |
248 Km |
2 |
In terms of road length, Burundi is the most deprived country of road infrastructure. The country has an average of almost half a kilometer of road per km2. Rwanda and Kenya are in second and third place respectively with 350 meters and 280 meters per km2 respectively. Uganda has a road density of 230 meters for every square kilometer. Tanzania is the least developed country in this area with about 40 meters of road for each km2.
Burundi |
Rwanda |
Kenya |
Uganda |
Tanzania |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Land Surface (km2) |
25,680 |
24,670 |
569,140 |
200,520 |
885,800 |
Road network (km) |
11,976 |
5,715 |
160,886 |
70,746 |
33,495 |
Quantity/surface (km/km2) |
0.47 |
0.35 |
0.28 |
0.23 |
0.04 |
The ease of import and export is the most important indicator for assessing the quality of transport. It is measured by meeting deadlines in the documentation requirement and procedures. The longer the time spent on borders and barriers, the worse the quality. In terms of exports, for example, the time frame for Burundi and Tanzania (120 hours) is low for Kenya (7 p.m.). In terms of import times, they are higher in Tanzania (264 hours) and Burundi (180 hours), and shorter in Rwanda (72 hours). The following table provides a comparison of documentation requirements for EAC member countries.
Country |
Export Time |
Import Time |
---|---|---|
Burundi |
120 |
180 |
Kenya |
19 |
84 |
Uganda |
64 |
138 |
Rwanda |
42 |
72 |
Tanzania |
120 |
264 |
Source : http://akeza.net/un-reseau-routier-dense-au-burundi-quel-potentiel-pour-le-developpement-du-pays/
Although the roads are economically strategic for Burundi, administrative procedures to facilitate cross-border traffic are still very cumbersome compared to most other ECA countries. To overcome this challenge, the modernization of control equipment is more than necessary because time has a direct impact on the cost of transport.
Distance Matrix
|
Bujumbura |
Bubanza |
Bururi |
Cibitoke |
Cankuzo |
Makamba |
Muramvya |
Muyinga |
Kayanza |
Kirundo |
Karusi |
Mwaro |
Gitega |
Ngozi |
Rutana |
Ruyigi |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bujumbura |
|
43 |
106 |
61 |
216 |
167 |
48 |
199 |
94 |
197 |
158 |
66 |
100 |
128 |
138 |
170 |
Bubanza |
43 |
|
167 |
51 |
256 |
204 |
87 |
180 |
75 |
178 |
185 |
109 |
140 |
107 |
181 |
210 |
Bururi |
106 |
167 |
|
168 |
187 |
37 |
119 |
183 |
201 |
245 |
148 |
84 |
90 |
233 |
80 |
138 |
Cibitoke |
61 |
51 |
168 |
|
281 |
228 |
109 |
188 |
83 |
197 |
219 |
127 |
161 |
115 |
200 |
232 |
Cankuzo |
216 |
256 |
187 |
281 |
|
166 |
168 |
60 |
167 |
126 |
107 |
148 |
116 |
135 |
137 |
49 |
Makamba |
167 |
204 |
37 |
228 |
166 |
|
156 |
220 |
238 |
282 |
185 |
12 |
127 |
270 |
51 |
138 |
Muramvya |
48 |
87 |
119 |
109 |
168 |
156 |
|
143 |
55 |
150 |
110 |
46 |
52 |
86 |
127 |
119 |
Muyinga |
199 |
180 |
183 |
188 |
60 |
220 |
143 |
|
185 |
64 |
48 |
139 |
93 |
73 |
182 |
109 |
Kayanza |
94 |
75 |
201 |
83 |
167 |
238 |
55 |
185 |
|
103 |
112 |
101 |
118 |
32 |
185 |
174 |
Kirundo |
197 |
178 |
245 |
197 |
126 |
282 |
150 |
64 |
103 |
|
94 |
171 |
155 |
71 |
207 |
176 |
Karusi |
158 |
185 |
148 |
219 |
107 |
185 |
110 |
48 |
112 |
94 |
|
104 |
116 |
78 |
130 |
99 |
Mwaro |
66 |
109 |
84 |
127 |
148 |
12 |
46 |
139 |
101 |
171 |
104 |
|
46 |
104 |
98 |
93 |
Gitega |
100 |
140 |
90 |
161 |
116 |
127 |
52 |
93 |
118 |
155 |
116 |
46 |
|
84 |
69 |
77 |
Ngozi |
128 |
107 |
233 |
115 |
135 |
270 |
86 |
73 |
32 |
71 |
78 |
104 |
84 |
|
153 |
142 |
Rutana |
138 |
181 |
80 |
200 |
137 |
51 |
127 |
182 |
185 |
207 |
130 |
98 |
69 |
153 |
|
88 |
Ruyigi |
170 |
210 |
138 |
232 |
49 |
138 |
119 |
109 |
174 |
176 |
99 |
93 |
77 |
142 |
88 |
|
Road Security
Burundi does not have any specialized service for road accident prevention even though road accident statistics are on the rise each year. The various services responsible for road safety are non-operational and lack coordination, and road safety information sources are unreliable. Insurance companies are the only reliable sources of information in matters relating to car accidents.
The National Road Agency being responsible for road infrastructure contributes to improve the situation, especially by considering aspects of road safety regarding both technical designing of infrastructure and the maintenance thereof.
Weighbridges and Axle Load Limits
Different axle load and gross vehicle mass (weight) limits is the current practice among the partner states within the EA region. Burundi and Rwanda still at early stages of developing laws and regulations to control vehicle overloading while Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda have more advanced laws and regulations - but differences in training of personnel and operational practices occur
Countries in the East African Community will have to uniform the laws on vehicle weight limits in less than a year.
This comes after member states reached consensus on commercial vehicle loading and management strategies. The forum resolved to apply consistent axle load limit of 56 tons on seven standard axles in all partner states.
Kenya allows a maximum of 48 tons for vehicles, Rwanda and Burundi 53 tons while Tanzania and Uganda allow 56 tons,
Kenya had initially opposed the adjustment and insisted on between 48 and 52 tons. While Tanzania and Uganda axle limits stand at 56 tons, Rwanda and Burundi limit stood at 53 tons.
Transport and infrastructure experts from EAC will now prepare a memorandum on the agreement for consideration by the Sectoral Council on Transport, Communication and Metrology on October 10, and a requisite bill prepared for enactment by early next year.
Type |
DRC |
Kenya |
Tanzania |
---|---|---|---|
Truck with 2 axles |
18,000 kg |
18,000 kg |
18,000 kg |
Truck with 3 axles |
24,000 kg |
26,000 kg |
26,000 kg |
Semi-trailer with 3 axles |
28,000 kg |
28,000 kg |
28,000 kg |
Truck with 4 axles |
28,000 kg |
30,000 kg |
28,000 kg |
Semi-trailer and drawbar with 4 axles |
36,000 kg |
36,000 kg |
36,000 kg |
Semi-trailer with 6 axles |
44,000 kg |
50,000 kg |
54,000 kg |
Truck & drawbar trailer with 5 axles |
50,000 kg |
44,000 kg |
45,000 kg |
Vehicle and semi-trailer with total of 6 axles |
37,000 kg |
50,000 Kg |
54,000 kg |
Truck & drawbar trailer with 6 axles |
45,000 kg |
52,000 kg |
53,000 kg |
NB: for Burundi, axle load limitation figures are not yet implemented
There is a plan to harmonize axle weight limit in all EAC countries. Typically, payload may not exceed 30MT for a truck of 6 axles.
For more information, please visit the following link.
Road Class and Surface Conditions
Classification |
Administrant Agency |
Network Length |
22 National Roads |
OdR |
1952 km |
---|---|---|
91 Provincial Roads |
OdR |
2522 km |
Communal Roads |
OdR |
2587 km |
Urban Roads (Out of Bujumbura) |
OdR |
325 km |
Classification | Description | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Road Category |
Total Length (km) |
Unpaved (Km) |
Paved (Km) |
|
National Roads |
1,952 |
305 |
1,647 |
|
Provincial Roads |
2,522 |
2,501 |
21 |
|
Communal Roads |
2587 |
2587 |
0 |
|
Urban Network (Bujumbura only) |
462 |
0 |
462 |
|
Total Unclassified Network |
6,150 |
|
|
|
National Road (RN) | Road with international links to Bujumbura and the major towns. (Bitumen surfacing and gravel) | |||
Provincial Road (RP) | Roads used for intra and inter provincial travel. Bitumen/ gravel. | |||
Communal Road (RC) | Roads in the rural areas. | |||
Urban Road | Road network in towns. |
Burundi main corridors in country
-KOBERO-GITEGA-BUJUMBURA
-GASENYI-NGOZI-BUJUMBURA
-KANYARU-KAYANZA-BUJUMBURA
-RUHWA-BUJUMBURA
-MUGINA-NYANZA-LAC-BUJUMBURA
Burundi Transport corridors
Northern corridor: Mombasa-Kampala-Kigali-Bujumbura
Central corridor: Dar-Es-Salaam-Kabanga-Bujumbura
Southern corridor: Mpulungu (Zambia)-Kigoma-Bujumbura