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Press release

29 July 2005

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Georgia homepage
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Tbilisi Public Transport Project [Project Summary Document]
Getting Georgian buses back on the road [Story]

Getting the buses back on the road

EBRD lends €3.1m to Georgia’s Tbilisi Bus Company to upgrade public transport

The EBRD is lending €3.1 million to the Tbilisi Bus Company to help Georgia restore basic municipal bus services in its capital and give the residents of Tbilisi access to affordable transport. The company, owned by the City of Tbilisi, will use the funds to buy 150 new and second-hand buses and parts. 

Georgia’s transport networks were hamstrung by the conflicts and underinvestment that followed independence in 1991. The Tbilisi Bus Company had 1,200 buses at that time for the city’s 1.4 million people. But by 2004 the fleet was down to 80 buses, with only half working on an average day.

City authorities rebuilding the fleet have already bought 182 second-hand buses, which cost €15,000 each, one-tenth of their value when new. The saving has enabled the company to offer good service with affordable fares despite low incomes in Tbilisi. With the 100 new extra buses bought by open tender and 50 second-hand buses bought by a direct contract, the company plans to expand the number of routes from 42 to 80, allowing buses to carry 18 per cent of Tbilisi’s passengers by 2007 against just 10 per cent today. As the official bus service improves, fewer minibuses will be needed and can be regulated more effectively thereby improving safety, traffic conditions and service quality.

The deal marks the first time an international finance organisation has financed the purchase of second-hand buses, said Nikolay Hadjiyski the EBRD’s Director, Municipal and Environmental Infrastructure. It is also the first non-sovereign loan for a municipal utility made to the Bank’s seven lowest-income countries of operation, the Early Transition Countries (ETC).

The ETC initiative was launched in 2004 to stimulate market activity in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, the Kyrgyz Republic, Moldova, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. It aims to stimulate market activity in these countries by using a streamlined approach to financing more and smaller projects, mobilising more investment, and encouraging economic reform. The initiative is part of an international effort to address poverty in these members of the Commonwealth of Independent States. The Bank will accept higher risk in the projects it finances in these countries, while still respecting the principles of sound banking.


Press contact:
Axel Reiserer, Tel: +44 20 7338 7753; E-mail: reiserea@ebrd.com



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