Tag: BRT

  • Old,  creaky Railway

    Old, creaky Railway

    Gboyega Alaka takes a look at the fate of the Nigerian Railway system, feeling the pulse of the transport system’s stakeholders.

    FOR those who live in a train town, city or station, such as Ijoko, Alagbado, Abeokuta, Ilorin or even Enugu and Kano, the sight of the Nigerian Railway Corporation s coaches are common. However, the railway for all its might and ability to convey thousands of people at one go, it still the least recognised and less patronised means of transport (compared to road transportation), amongst a huge fraction of Nigeria’s humongous population. Why?

    Conversely, living or working along or around major terminus or train routes such as Iddo, Apapa, Ebute-Meta, Onipanu, Oshodi, Ikeja, Agege or any other across the country inevitably makes you notice its existence, as each passing of the snaky vibrating machine is never one to be ignored or denied. Even the deaf is forced to ‘hear’ and feel its presence, as the massive engine shuttles, dragging its adjoining sections (coaches) up and down its rail lines, literally punctuating the consciousness of anyone around with its menacing noise, blaring horn and perpetual length.

    Perhaps many Nigerians might be surprised at the disclosure that only four million citizens commuted on the train last year alone! (Going by the corporation’s MD’s declaration that the train ferried 3.2 million people in the first three quarters of last year). This, if placed against the background of the country’s huge population and the fact that even the Lagos Bus Rapid Transport alone (BRT), which operation is restricted to Lagos metropolis alone conveyed a whopping 45 million people in the same year, then we might begin to understand their perspective.

     

    Neglected and shunned

    The question is: Why is the train so unpopular or seen as a last option, especial amongst the majority of urban Nigerians? Everywhere you look, in Lagos, Ibadan or even Port Harcourt, there seems to be a mad rush for road transportation. People queue, wait and struggle and jostle to board a car, bus or sometimes a lorry – even to locations where there are available train options. And that is in spite of the much higher cost, greater propensity to accidents and frustrating traffic snarls on the road. The biggest irony of it all is that this same people daily hunger and clamour for alternative means of transportation, citing all the woes and difficulties bedeviling road transportation. To them, the train in Nigeria simply does not work. This they get from the images of over-packed trains they behold daily along Ikeja, Oshodi and other railway routes.

    “I just cannot bring myself to getting on a train,” Tina Odogwu, who has lived in Abule-Egba area of Lagos and worked on Lagos Island for about seven years, declared, when this reporter asked why she had not considered the option of commuting by train. Despite the harrowing and frustrating traffic situation on this return trip home from work, with everyone on the 16-seater Toyota Hiace mini-bus soaked in sweat and lamenting being packed so tightly after a hard day’s work, Tina who has never commuted on a train, and has never thought of it retorted, “How can you expect me to go on a Nigerian train with all that overcrowding and people hanging everywhere? I even hear it is worse than a molue bus, with market women littering the whole place with their wares and leaving little or no room for comfort.”

    For Tina therefore, it is road transport for now. The fact that the same situation she condemns in the railway exists in her preferred bus system does not seem to change anything. She agrees though that she will gladly hop on a train once she begins to see a visible change in standard and sanity level, “like what obtains in countries like the United Kingdom, USA and co.”

     

    Not so unpopular

    However, to some segments of the Lagos population the train is not so unpopular. Repeated visits to the popular Lagos Terminus at Iddo proved this. Despite its bad image, the railway has its own faithful, who will travel by no other means but the train. To them, it is already a part of their lives and will not give it up for anything, except maybe they moved away from the train routes or the big machine stopped working.

    Akin Oyewole is a regular train traveller who lives in Ijoko and works as a teacher at Methodist Girls High School, Yaba. To get a comfortable seat on the first train that takes off by 5.00am every morning, Oyewole has to wake up and leave his home as early as 4.30am. Anything later than that means he would not get a seat, as any left over seat would have been commandeered and reserved by those already seated for their friends and relatives who probably hadn’t even left their beds.

    He revealed that he prefers the railway mainly because of its cost-effectiveness. “Traveling by train is a lot cheaper than by bus. For instance it only costs N150 to get to Ijoko from Iddo terminus here. But if I’m traveling by bus, from here to Oshodi is already N200; whereas I’ll still need to take another N200 bus from Oshodi to Sango-Ota, from where I will take another N100 bus to Ijoko. That adds up to a minimum N500. So in a way, I am paying just about 35% of what I would have paid if I’m using the bus.”

    He revealed that it is for this same reason that several other train faithful keep faith with ‘iron serpent’. Besides, it is their own way of appreciating the government’s effort, as it would have been a waste of funds and effort, if everybody despises the train.

    Asked to comment on the comfort level, which is what lots of train cynics adduce for their lack of enthusiasm, Oyewole said “That unfortunately is one area the authorities seem to be failing. It just seems like there are no officials to caution or regulate the excesses of some of the passengers, who have a tendency to be reckless. If you wait a little longer, you’re likely to see how passengers fill up the entire space. To make matters worse, the people standing are usually more than those sitting, causing a lot of discomfort especially. It is as a result of this that a lot of people also place huge preference on sitting by the window, where they can easily get fresh air and also stay away from those standing on the aisle.”

    For Iyabo Onibiyo, a trader who lives in Ijoko and plies her trade on Lagos Island, her love for the train started from the day she discovered it could help her avoid the maddening traffic on Lagos roads. “I normally join the 5.40am shuttle and if it takes off on time, I am usually in Lagos by a little after 7am, which for me is perfect. Sometimes, there is a delay and it takes off around 6.20am; but for me the big advantage is that I am not caught up in any traffic gridlock.”

    She reveals that the same one hour 20 minutes journey could take her up to four hours in the morning and another four hours in the evening, which she said is one thing her ageing body can no longer cope with. If the 4.15 pm train moves right on time on this particular day, Onibiyo said she should be in the comfort of her home by 6.00pm, giving her enough time to relax, relate with the kids and even sleep early.

    On overcrowding and the discomfort that comes with the daily trips, Onibiyo said it is a simple situation that could be solved if the authorities provide more coaches. “If we have more coaches, most of those standing and causing the rest of us discomfort would have seats and be able to rest their feet on the long journey. Aside that, I think things are reasonably okay, just that the majority of people out there do not know.”

    At this point, another passenger who had been listening to this conversation narrated how one of the hanging passengers was snapped away by a huge tree branch and instantly killed.

    Onibiyo and Oyewole would score the railway corporation a grudging 60percent for their performance so far.

    Another train commuter, Gbenga Aluko however does not seem impressed by the railway corporation’s performance; at least in recent times. Aluko, a clearing agent at the Apapa Port, who together with a couple of friends and colleagues has opted for railway option to beat the frustrating traffic on the two major roads leading in and out of the port and beyond. With a home in Alagbado, he usually commutes on the Apapa-Alagbado mass transit shuttle and said he is usually at his destination in about one hour fifteen minutes, give or take. That trip, on a bad traffic day would take a minimum four hours. Recently, the Apapa schedule however became a bit haphazard and unpredictable, taking off sometimes an hour and half behind schedule. “In the last month or so, there have been unusual delays at the Apapa station such that the 6.00pm train takes off as late as 7pm, sometimes 7.30pm. By implication, this means I will get home very late, which does not augur well with me. Besides, I sometimes close much earlier and it thus means that I have to hang around until 7.30, doing practically nothing.”

    Aluko thus thinks that the railway corporation’s management needs to step up standards in its Urban Mass Transit Shuttle.

    He especially thinks the authorities should pay serious attention to the issue of congestion. According to him, the overcrowding has got to a level where passengers decide on their own to sit through their rides in toilets compartments. “What that means,” he said stating the obvious, “is that anyone who loves himself should take care of himself before getting on the train. As I speak, the only compartment, where the toilet is available for use is the first class section.”

    He also revealed that he always rides in the first class compartment every morning just to avoid the terrible overcrowding of the early morning rush hours. He would gladly part with N500 and get to work looking and feeling fresh, than be miserly and ride in the N150 economy class sections and get to work looking disheveled. “Your white shirt would most definitely turn brown if you take the risk.”

    This is, however, not to say that the first class compartments are in perfect conditions, Aluko volunteered, without any prodding. “If you asked me, I’d say the standards in the first class coaches need some improving because I see no reason why people should be standing in first class compartments. That is another overcrowding in the making if not discouraged.” He wondered why it is so difficult for the authorities to add more coaches, even to the first class section.

    Asked to compare the rush-hour situation in the economy class with a typical overcrowded molue bus, Aluko says “The molue is better. If by any stroke of hard luck you’re not able to get a sit by the window, then you will end up on the seat edges, otherwise known as ‘sorry zone’. It is called ‘sorry’ because it is a place where all manner of people hit, knock and trample upon you and all you get is ‘sorry’.”

    In a way, the general complaint of over-crowding seems to give credence to Adeseyi Sijuade, an engineer and the corporation’s MD’s declaration late last year. According to him, the corporation ferried up to 3.2 million passengers in the first three quarters of that year (2013). That, to many people, is an improvement and a sign that things are looking up. It also confirms the organisation’s assistant director, Public Relation, Mr. David Ndanusa Ndakotsu’s insistence that “it is not true that Nigerians are not aware of the railway’s activities.”

    According to Ndakotsu, Nigerian Railway Corporation’s services cut across the country, with nothing less than 430 stations between Lagos and Kano. The same, he said is the case in the Eastern flank, from Port Harcourt to Maiduguri, where the stations are in excess of 570. He therefore argued that these stations and the renewed regularity of the train services negate any suggestion that the railway is not popular amongst Nigerians.

    Critics have also tried to burst these officials bubble by benchmarking that statistics against the number of people railways in other huge population countries like India, Pakistan, Egypt or South Africa ferried within the same period. They wonder why the railway has continued to wallow in the backwaters of Nigerian transportation system, even when it is clear that it is the only way such huge number of people, like Nigeria’s over 150 million people can conveniently commute, especially within the densely populated urban centres.

     

    Insufficient coaches

    They also say the evident overcrowding, is only an indication of inefficiency or lack of adequate administrative and governmental attention. “Why should a train plying an urban route like Lagos-Ogun (Ijoko) be condemned to just about eight coaches?” Ladipo, who also travels by the train occasionally asked. It simply means somebody is not thinking or acting right. “Common Sense demands that we should have more coaches, more rail lines and more shuttles. It is then that the corporation can embark on any public enlightenment and expect Nigerians to migrate to the railway option. As it is, people are always going to score it low.”

    For commuters like Aluko, his candid verdict is that “the Nigerian Railway system is not okay at all. The coaches are not enough and it’s taking them donkey years and endless promises to increase it.”

    Sekinat Alaka, a jewelry seller, who sometimes travels as far as Dubai and India to buy her goods, also condemned the insufficient coach situation, wondering why Nigeria has to descend to this level. For someone who has commuted in trains in Dubai, India and other Asian countries, Alaka can conveniently tell you that there is no basis for comparison. “Aside the fact that the coaches are never enough here, leading to congestion, why aren’t the fans ever working? At least that would have reduced the near suffocating situation we sometimes experience on the train. Do you know that people sometimes faint due to the heat?” She queried, apparently adding a new angle to the story. She also wondered why the authorities don’t put on the light even after dusk, leaving all passengers in pitch darkness, something she described as “a lack of regard for fellow Nigerians and a prerequisite for crime.”

    Alaka, whose only reason for using the train is its ability to cut out traffic therefore suggested seriously that “more coaches would enable more people to patronise the system.”

    Paul, a trader in Idumota area of Lagos has a panacea to all the troubles. His solution? The corporation’s MD should board the train incognito and experience first hand what fellow Nigerians have been going through.

  • LAMATA goes for concrete roads to save BRT

    LAMATA goes for concrete roads to save BRT

    To protect Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) routes, the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA) is replacing the asphalt dedicated lanes with concrete from Mile 12 to Anthony. ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE reports.

     

    When the Lagos State Government introduced the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) eight years ago, it never knew that the asphalt roads’ lifespan would impede its efficiency.

    For reasons ranging from soil nature, rising water level and erosion, among others, most of the dedicated lanes have been washed away, leaving the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA) to fix them at colossal costs yearly.

    But a breakthrough came last week, as the agency unfolded plans of replacing all asphalt BRT lanes with concrete, beginning with both carriages of Mile 12 to Anthony Village.

    Though the project has taken off, the contractor, CGC Limited, has not moved to site, due to what a LAMATA source called “technical hitches”.

    LAMATA’s Managing Director Dr. Dayo Mobereola said the government opted for concrete because it is cheaper to maintain.

    He said: “The Bus Rapid Transit lanes are being converted from asphalt to concrete pavement in a bid to reduce the lanes’ maintenance cost, guarantee the longevity of the buses and reduce their downtime.”

    Where it is used in other parts of the world, concrete pavement, Mobereola said, reduces vehicles’ maintenance cost and preserves the road.

    Briefing stakeholders, among them, the National Union of Road Transport Workers, cement manufacturers, community leaders and lawmakers, Mobereola said: “Concrete pavements are maintenance free and could last more than 30 years before requiring maintenance.”

    When completed, he added, commuters would experience improved waiting and journey times between Mile 12 and CMS.

    LAMATA’s Director of Roads and Traffic Maintenance Mr. Olufunsho Elulade, said the asphalt surface would be removed and replaced with concrete, adding that it would last for over 30 years.

    To minimise the impact of the construction on traffic, Elulade said the contractor is being encouraged to work at night.

    Chairman, House Committee on Commerce, Industry and Transportation Hon. Bisi Yusuf, who was at the forum, urged stakeholders, particularly transport unions, to cooperate with LAMATA to ensure the timely completion of the project, adding that delay may cost the government more.

    LAMATA’s step has further consolidated experts’ push for the adoption of concrete roads against asphalt surfacing or other materials.

    Construction experts and cement manufacturers at a conference, a year ago, canvassed the adoption of concrete roads in line with their universal acceptance as the best.

    Statistics show that 40 per cent of roads in the United States and Germany are concrete; two per cent of roads in emerging economies, such as India and less than 0.1 per cent in Nigeria are constructed with concrete.

    Experts said the relatively scarce and expensive nature of cement on one part and the hitherto low local production capacity, put at less than 2,000 metric tonnes per year, made asphalt or plain laterite road construction the nation’s only choice.

    However, the total installed capacity of all local cement manufacturers has increased over the years from 2,000 metric tonnes per year in 2003, to 28,000 metric tonnes per year.

    With the nation moving away from being the world’s leading importer of the product in 2006, to self-sufficiency, cement producers said they are better positioned to meet its domestic needs.

    Chairman, Cement Manufacturers’ Association of Nigeria (CMAN), Mr Joseph Makoju, said: “Benchmarking against international practice, about 40 per cent of the roads in the developed countries such as USA and Germany are made of cement concrete, whereas it is only about two per cent in emerging economies countries such as India and less than 0.1 per cent in Nigeria.”

    Makoju said due to its durability and cost effectiveness, cement concrete would be the best answer to the poor state of the nation’s 195,400 kilometres of roads.

    The Federal Government has promised to collaborate with the association to test run the use of cement in road pavements.

    The Minister for Works, Mr. Mike Onolememen, said the government would be collaborating with Dangote Cement Plc, Lafarge WAPCO Nigeria Plc, Cement Company of Northern Nigeria, Ashaka Cement and United Cement Company, UniCem, Calabar on the new project.

    He said an experimentation on rigid pavements (which is another name for cement concrete surfacing), would start with the Kachie-Ajie road, which links the Federal Capital Territory to Baro Port in Niger State, and the Ikorodu-Shagamu road.

    “We want to know what the manufacturers are willing to do to make the project realistic. We would carry out laboratory test on the products to ensure that they are good as we prepare to begin the construction of rigid pavement carriageway in Nigeria.

    “We have identified major road works where we want to experiment rigid pavement design. Consultants were commissioned and they told me that one of those roads is the Kachie-Ajie road to connect the Federal Capital Territory to Baro Port in Niger State.”

    “The second one is the Ikorodu-Shagamu road. We have completed the design of the rigid pavement and commenced procurement for the two roads. Once the 2014 budget is approved, the projects will come on stream,” Onolememen said.

    He said the government is looking forward to collaborating with cement manufacturers in ensuring the success of the experiment.

    Lafarge WAPCO’s Managing Director Mr Guillaume Roux admits the industry produces far more than the country consumes.

    Roux, who said his company has nine plants and intends to increase it to 17 at the end of the year, agreed that rigid pavements would make roads last longer.

    While concrete and cement had a very long history of being used in the construction of buildings, it was not until 1891 that it was used to build a road.

    The first of such was the Court Street in Bellefontaine, Ohio, US, where George Bartholomew experimented with concrete. The quality of the material used on the road was over 8,000 pounds per square inch.

    This is twice the strength of today’s mixes. It may also be why the road is still in place and being used without having undergone any major repairs or improvements.

    In 1913, the first section of highway in the United States was poured using concrete cement to make the pavement. It covered 24 miles and was five inches thick, spanning a width of nine feet. The highway was just outside of Pine Bluff in Arkansas. One year later, there were over 2,300 miles of highway made from this material. By 1919, Oregon had become the first state to charge a tax on fuels to help fund the cost of installing new highways.

    In 1930, Pennsylvania began construction of the Pennsylvania Turnpike. This was the first intercity toll road in the country and was made entirely of concrete.

    The history of concrete and cement goes back many centuries to ancient Egypt and China. In ancient Rome, builders first began to construct roads and bridges using concrete.

    While the 1960s and 1970s are considered to be the peak years for the use of concrete in road construction, it is still used in road construction around the world today.

    A cement manufacturer Carib Cement said the benefits of concrete roadways include resistance to erosion from torrential rains and a longer pavement life, “more than three times that of an asphalt roadway.

    “Concrete roads are also more environmental friendly. Whereas asphalt roads produce more heat and harmful greenhouse gases, and tend to leach into limestone, cement-based roadways do not. Also, at the end of the concrete road’s life cycle, its components can be recycled and converted into aggregates. Concrete roads have a reduced urban heat effect.”

  • BRT drivers, conductors connive to extort commuters

    The operation of the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), is being threatened by the antics of some of the operators’ workers.

    Some drivers (pilots) and conductors (ticketers) seemed to have devised way to maximise profit, thereby denying commuters an affordable means of transportation as designed by the government.

    Investigation on some major roads indicated that these drivers and ticketers have been fleecing commuters for long.

    The practice is rampant on the Ikorodu to Oshodi and Ikorodu/CMS/Obalende routes.

    Those involved in the practice are the drivers and conductors of the Bus Franchise Scheme (BFS) comprising Nationwide, Adonis and Mutual Benefits.

    Instead of collecting the approved fares, the drivers and their conductors have impose their own fares on commuters.

    They call passengers willing to pay the approved fare for the full trip, not withstanding where they wish to drop.

    Commuters who refuse to buy such tickets are not picked.

    Passengers are forced to buy N150 ticket from Ikorodu to Ajegunle, Owode-Onirin, Mile 12 and Ketu. The approved fares for such those routes is N100.

    Passengers who insisted on paying the approved fares are prevented from boarding, until all seats in the bus have been filled by those who buy the N150 ticket.

    “What they usually do, is to call for Ojota-Oshodi passengers. When the seats are full, they would start calling for passengers for Owode-Mile 12-Ketu-Oshodi route,” said a passenger.

    Similarly, buses plying the CMS/Obalende routes, have not been picking Ketu-bound passengers from Ikorodu except where they are prepared to buy the N200 tickets.

    The situation has often caused skirmishes between conductors and passengers, with the drivers taking sides with their conductors.

     

  • No bus plunged into the lagoon — LAGBUS, BRT

    No bus plunged into the lagoon — LAGBUS, BRT

     

    Operators of both the Bus Rapid Transport (BRT) and LAGBUS bus services in Lagos have denied that a vehicle in their fleets was involved in any road mishap on Monday.

    The rumour mill was thick on Monday morning to the effect that ‘a fully loaded BRT bus crashed and plunged into the Lagoon from the Third Mainland Bridge in Lagos’.

    The managing director of LAGBUS Assets Management Ltd., operators of LAGBUS buses, Mr Babatunde Disu, denied any such incident.

    Disu told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that no bus in the LAGBUS fleet, as well as its sister transport company, BRT, was involved in any accident on Monday.

    “Some people can be mischievous! Nothing of such has happened and nobody is praying for such a disaster”, Disu said.

    In the same vein, Mr Kolawole Ojelabi,  a consultant with the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA)– regulators of the BRT– told NAN that the “malicious rumour was only the imagination of some weird people”.

    Ojelabi also prayed that no such evil would befall the transport sector in the state, either private or public. (NAN)

  • The BRT on Ikorodu Road

    The BRT on Ikorodu Road

    I am writing to comment on the effectiveness of the Bus Rapid Transport (BRT) system which was introduced on the Ikorodu -Owode – Mile 12 road a few years ago by the administration of Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN) of Lagos State.

    Since that road was decongested by the BRT buses, it has been very easy and safe for commuters to travel from Ikorodu to other parts of the state. There is no doubt in the minds of those who do not even want to see anything good in the state to appreciate the fact that Ikorodu-Owode-Mile 12 residents are happier now.

    When I moved to Ikorodu in 2006, it was hellish. In fact, near impossible for me to go to work every morning. Often, I’d wake up as early as 4.30a.m in order to beat the early morning traffic. It got to a stage that my wife suggested we abandon our home in Ikorodu to go live somewhere closer to Apapa where my office was located.

    However, I contemplated on the incessant movement of the kids and my young family then. Today the BRT buses are stationed in choice and popular bus stops in the whole of Ikorodu metropolis; all you have to do is move to the bus stop nearest to your house. There you can board the one going to CMS, TBS or Costain directly and from there to other destinations.

    The arrangement is so comfortable and appealing to the people that today the usual tension on the roads and at the bus stops have considerably reduced. People can wake up at their own time now, walk leisurely to the bus stop and in a few minutes be at their destinations. Good soup, like we usually say in a local parlance, na money make am.

    Whoever says good thing is not good, well, let his wife beget a monkey-like baby for him and let’s see how he will feel. Governor Fashola has a human touch, with the zest of an urbane leader, civilised and foresighted. He is not like other Nigerian leaders who will travel abroad only to admire the good things there. When they come back they’ll glorify what they saw and enjoyed.

    Fashola visited places abroad where BRT is a huge success and came back to give us a replica of what we need here to live good and reasonable life. For those who may wish to know, BRT is a remarkable project in places like Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo, Salvador and Porto Alegre, all major cities in Brazil in South America. Also in Bogota in Colombia, Brisbane in Australia and Jakarta in Indonesia, this mode of transportation have been in operation over time.

    In Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, a city of twenty-five million people, sitting precariously on the Atlantic Ocean, the BRT system has come to put smiles on the faces of residents. It is so effective that most commuters even shun the rail and the underground tube. The success of BRT in Rio is so remarkable because like Lagos, it was the former capital of Brazil and today it is its main commercial nerve centre. The city is also 75% sand filled just like Lagos. I therefore commend Governor Fashola for his steadfastness in this regard. If he had done this system the other way round, people would have risen against him today.

    All we are saying is: let him travel more to come and replicate more juicy things to make life more pleasant for Lagosians. Ikorodu people will continue to give their kudos to him. Very soon Ikorodu will be a town to emulate.

     

    By Kola Ibitoye

    Ikorodu, Lagos