FesOujda expressway

The Fes-Oujda Expressway is a motorway connecting Morocco and Algeria, linking Oujda to Rabat, Casablanca, Fes, and southern Morocco. It operates as a paid toll road designated as A2 and began service on July 25, 2011. The expressway extends the Rabat-Fes route and is part of Morocco's east-west corridor.

Construction started in 2007 with an intended completion by 2011. The projected cost was 9,125 million Dirhams (MDH), but it reached 10,800 MDH, averaging 33.44 MDH per kilometer. Funding came from various sources, including the Hassan II Fund and international investors such as the Islamic Bank for Development, Arab Fund, Kuwait Fund, OPEC, FEMIP, and Abu Dhabi Fund.

The road is divided into ten sections spanning cities like Fes, Béni Bouzert, Taza, Guercif, Taourirt, Laayoun, and Oujda. It serves as part of the larger l'Autoroute Maghrébine network, stretching from Mauritania to Libya, enhancing Mediterranean coast access and complementing transport infrastructure such as the Nador port railroad.