The project, which has been
awarded to the China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation, is being
jointly funded by the Nigerian and Chinese governments, and will cost about
$1.5bn (N458bn).
The Federal Government will
commence the construction of a standard gauge rail line from Lagos to Ibadan
next month, the Managing Director, Nigerian Railway Corporation, Mr. Fidet
Okheria, has said.
Already, the Federal
Government has made its counterpart funds available, while China promises to
release its own by the end of this month, according to Okheria.
This is coming about six
months after the Federal Government and the CCECC signed an agreement for the
project.
The NRC helmsman, who spoke
with our correspondent exclusively in Lagos on Friday shortly after receiving a
leadership award from the ECOWAS Youth Council, said, “The Chinese government
promises that by the end of the month to release its counterpart funds. And the
project should, therefore, start in the next one month.”
The new Lagos-Ibadan rail,
spanning 156.65 kilometres, is a double line, which is the first phase of a new
Lagos-Kano standard gauge line.
The new line, when
completed in 18 months, would coexist with the old narrow gauge rail line,
Okheria said.
The contract for the
2,733km new Lagos-Kano rail was first awarded by former President Olusegun
Obasanjo in 2006 at a cost of $8.3bn to the Chinese company (CCECC) but could
not be executed due to paucity of funds.
It was re-awarded to the
same contractor by the Goodluck Jonathan administration in 2012 for execution
in six phases, starting with the Lagos-Ibadan stretch.
Okheria also said
arrangements were being finalised to start the construction of the
Lagos-Calabar and Kaduna-Kano rail lines.
The Federal Government and
the CCECC last year signed the contract for the construction of the
Lagos-Ibadan and Calabar-Port Harcourt rail lines after the two parties agreed
to cut down the total cost for the projects from $11.917bn to $11.117bn.
The Minister of
Transportation, Mr. Rotimi Amaechi, who signed on behalf of the Federal
Government, had said the cost reduction for the projects was achieved after the
contract was renegotiated by both parties.
“The contract was awarded
by the regime of former President Goodluck Jonathan for $11.917bn. When we took
over at the ministry, we renegotiated with the CCECC and we succeeded in reducing
the contract sum from $11.917bn to $11.117bn and we are able to save $800m
after the renegotiation,” he had explained.
Amaechi also said the
projects should be completed in two years, adding that the railways would be
connected to the seaports.
For the Lagos-Calabar rail
line, the minister had said the CCECC would “commence the construction of the
first segment with Calabar-Uyo and Aba-Port Harcourt, and this will include all
the seaports on this route. But the entire contract covers Calabar, Uyo, Port
Harcourt, Yenogoa, Otuoke, Ughelli, Warri, Benin, Agbor, Asaba, Onitsha and
back to Benin, Ore, Sagamu and Lagos.”

Na so dem talk
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