Tag: EXPRESSWAY

  • Bi-Courtney and Lagos-Ibadan Expressway

    SIR: A distinguished man of letters and former Nigerian ambassador to Germany, Prof. Akinjide Osuntokun, wrote about the sorry state of the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway in his March 31, column in The Nation.

    The article, entitled ‘Lagos-Ibadan Expressway is jinxed’, came with factual and emotional dimensions. It is yet another page in a series of spirited newspaper commentaries on the troubled highway reconstruction project.

    The article reflects the pains in the hearts of road users, but deflects from the fact that government is to blame for their woes, not Bi-Courtney Ltd.

    Osuntokun stated: “The way things are going on in this country, we may die under the weight of irresponsible litigations.”

    That statement would get any unprejudiced reader wondering what other options there are for an investor who had a partnership arrangement with the Federal Government (FG) to provide good infrastructure for Nigerians but lost over $300million, while government officials were blocking his every move to make progress on the project. It took the FG more than two years to even approve the design for the road. Then, the same government that failed to play its part well, turned around to terminate the concession agreement, and engaged a new concessionaire in a shady and unlawful manner.

    The article further stated: “As for the lawsuits, there is need for out of court settlement… If out of court arbitration fails, this government should be strong enough to damn the consequence in the public interest. I mean heaven will not fall! The government which owns the land should declare the company a trespasser and build the road. Enough of Turenci!”

    Declare Bi-Courtney as a trespasser? This is difficult to reconcile with Prof. Osuntokun’s insistence, elsewhere in the article, on doing things properly. If there were any trespasser on this project, it is government. Trespass, going by definition, is the act of being present on another’s land without lawful excuse. Bi-Courtney is the rightful owner of the highway by virtue of its concession that was purportedly terminated.

    Events have shown that government is the meddlesome interloper and self-interested intruder on the highway project. The writer should have exposed the rot in the system and how the country is fast becoming a cemetery of dreams for investors.

    Bi-Courtney, being a responsible corporate citizen, had demanded for arbitration; that’s a peaceful conflict resolution mechanism enshrined in the concession agreement. It’s meant to guard against the so-called ‘irresponsible litigations’, but the Federal Government shunned that demand thereby plunging the project into crisis.

    While addressing the issue recently, the Minister of Works, Babatunde Raji Fashola, said: “Regrettably, while not going into the merits and demerits of the FGN’s cancellation of the concession, it sends a not-welcoming message to foreign investors if the decision was without basis or influenced by politics…

    “If that was the case, as a foreign investor, I will be asking myself the kind of treatment that awaits me as a foreigner if the government does that to a citizen…”

    Why is Bi-Courtney fighting for justice?

    Some people seem to have forgotten that the FG made Bi-Courtney do palliative works, repeatedly, on the entire road for three years, and even reclaimed the completely damaged Aramed end of the road near Ibadan at a huge cost, while the company was held back by bureaucratic bottlenecks in the Ministry of Works.

    While stating that it was not opposed to the reconstruction of the road, Bi-Courtney had noted, among other things, that it had never received a kobo from the FG or any of its agencies, unlike what the same government had turned around to do for another would-be concessionaire that was being paid N2billion monthly for the same project and was also provided with unlimited guarantee.

    A guarantee was all that Bi-Courtney needed, and had asked for, but was denied in 2012, when its international partners – Group Five, were ready to roll.

    There is danger ahead if we fail to expose the rot in our system and make amends. Government must be guided to do the right thing at all times.

    Now that the FG is committing additional N40billion to the road project, there’s an urgent need to dialogue with Bi-Courtney, apologise to the company for all the unconstitutional actions by the FG, and work out modalities on how it can be part of the project. Shutting the firm out is not the way to go.

     

    • Olusegun Kehinde,

    Lagos.

  • Lagos-Ibadan Expressway: The way out

    That the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway has been so mired in controversy of high magnitude, attracting so many interests, is because of its significance to the socio-economic life of the country. Incidentally, it is the only major artery to Lagos, handling more than 90 per cent of the entire human and vehicular traffic to the commercial capital of Nigeria. It is the only road accommodating the large number of articulated vehicles, among thousands of other vehicles, lifting fuel and other goods out of the port city of Lagos, even as almost all attempts made to revive the railway system of the colonial era have been frustrated. This explains the interests always generated when the 115-kilometre expressway is being debated.

    In fact, the ante was upped in recent months because of the excruciating suffering of commuters and the sudden emergence of a company, Motorway Assets Limited (MAL), which claimed to be the new concessionaire, seeking N150billion to complete it – even when we were told by the past administration of President Goodluck Jonathan that it had awarded the contract for its reconstruction to Julius Berger and Reynolds Construction Company (RCC) at the cost of N167billion.

    Meanwhile, the Ogun State government also claimed that it carried out palliative measures to fix portions of the same road that had been purportedly concessioned to MAL. It is now abundantly clear that the shenanigans concerning the road were caused by the Jonathan administration, for political gains and selfish interest. It is also clear that the process of re-concessioning the road to Motorway after the termination of the concession to Bi-Courtney Highways Services Limited (BHSL), was far from transparent, as Nigerians were not aware of any calls for competitive bidding from competent companies for the road. It is obvious that it was an under-the-table deal, because Nigerians were also not aware when the purported contract to Julius Berger and RCC suddenly turned to a concession to Motorway, whose antecedents in PPP were also not known. Moreover, not a few are confused over the role played by the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC). The ICRC, as we know, is saddled with the responsibility of regulating PPP.

    Therefore, for the road to become a world-class one on which travellers can have safe and smooth rides, there is the need for Federal Government to revisit the concession earlier granted Bi-Courtney. Simply put, Federal Government can escape the legal and moral cobweb in which it has entrapped itself, by allowing Bi-Courtney to complete the reconstruction on account of the company’s antecedents.

    No one can deny that Bi-Courtney, having spent three years maintaining the road with over $300million down the drain while its concession lasted, having acquired billions of naira worth ofequipment in preparation for the work to begin, and having the technical manpower and the financial muscle to execute the project, has the wherewithal to execute the concession excellently. Bi-Courtney’s performance at the Murtala Muhammed Airport Terminal II (MMA2) attests to its capability to handle projects of such magnitude anywhere in the world.

    Recall that former President Olusegun Obasanjo had attempted to expand and improve the Lagos-Ibadan road by concessioning it to BHSL under a Design, Build, Operate and Transfer (DBOT) arrangement under the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) mantra of his administration. However, the brilliant idea did not yield the desired result before Obasanjo left in 2007. The succeeding administration could also not do much, despite its good disposition to the project, before the unfortunate demise of President Yar’Adua. It is noteworthy to recollect that officials in the Ministry of Works played an ignoble role by sabotaging Obasanjo’s concession idea with snail speed bureaucracy, vested interests, unbridled politicking and ignorance about how PPP works, all of which led to the final surreptitious termination of the concession by the Jonathan administration.

    While Nigerians waited with bated breath for the commencement of reconstruction of the expressway by Bi-Courtney, which waited for about two years for the approval of its design by the Federal Ministry of Works, we witnessed routine maintenance of several portions by the company, as a way of minimizing the incessant crashes and traffic gridlocks on the road, which the current concessionaire has refused to do because they lack the financial muscle and the technical capability to handle a project of this magnitude.

    Although when Jonathan announced the termination of the concession in November 2012, it was celebration galore by a section of the populace simply because they did not understand what concession is all about, events in the last few months and the attendant confusion have shown that it is not yet Uhuru for the Lagos-Ibadan Road.

    All over the world, concession is a major way of financing big projects, as various countries have embraced the PPP idea. But, such concessions are done transparently in other climes, while they are done deceitfully in Nigeria. From the Americas to Europe, Asia and other continents of the world, the idea of PPP has come to stay and Nigeria cannot be an exception in a global village. However, our country must do it right and with sincerity of purpose. Many companies are already involved in concessions, encouraged by their governments to provide jobs for their people and take the pressure of infrastructure provision off the government, but their concessions go to companies with the technical competence and financial muscle to execute such projects.

    In fact, Ferrovial Subsidiary Cintra, as one of the world’s leading private sector developers of transportation infrastructure in terms of the number of projects and the volume of investment, manages 28 concessions extending more than 2,232 kilometres of roads in Canada, the United States (US), Spain, the United Kingdom (UK), Portugal, Ireland, Greece, Colombia and Australia. The firm is one of the soundest multinationals in the sector, with investments totalling over 21.5 billion euro.

    Also, South Africa has an important experience in PPP, involving about 300 projects on the national and provincial levels since 1994. Indeed, the South African National Treasury, the body that deals with PPP projects, developed a PPP Manual. The manual defines “a PPP to be a contract between a public sector institution and a private party, in which the private party assumes substantial financial, technical and operational risks in the design, financing, building and operation of a project.” The guidelines discuss various procurement possibilities varying between public procurement and full privatisation. The South African National Roads Agency began tolling part of the major national roads in the mid-1990s and developed concessionary structures to overcome budgetary constraints.

    This is the beauty of PPP because it allows government to channel its resources to other means for the benefit of the citizens, and Nigeria with its current financial straits cannot be an exception.

     

    • Olagokun is an Ibadan-based company executive.
  • Trailer knocks down fleeing robbers on expressway

    Trailer knocks down fleeing robbers on expressway

    Ill luck befell two robbery suspects in Ogun state as a moving truck knocked them while fleeing from police operatives attached to the Ibafo Division of the Ogun State Police Command.

    The two robbers were arrested along the notorious long bridge towards by Isheri end of the Lagos – Ibadan Expressway on Thursday.

    The robbers who were robbing some road users in front of the Mountain of Fire and Miracle Ministry, had fled upon sighting the Police but arrested when a moving truck on the Expressway knock down two of them while being chased by the Police.

    The suspected robbers seriously wounded before they were eventually arrested alive, are Sola Bilaminu and Ibrahim Sandi – both of no fixed address.

    Stolen items and their operational motorcycle used for the robbery attack on victims were also recovered by the Police.

    The Police Public Relations Officer in the state, Olumuyiwa Adejobi, said the victims of the robbery operation have identified the suspects as those who attacked them while the stolen items have also been returned to the owners.

    Adejobi, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), said the Commissioner of Police, Abdulmajid Ali, lauded the Police operatives for their commitment and courage while the suspects would be transferred to the Special Anti Robbery Squad (SARS) in Abeokuta for investigation.

    According to him, Ali has directed that the Ogun state stretch of the expressway should be adequately policed regularly to protect road users who ply it by night.

    “We are assuring the good people of Ogun State and all road users in the state of adequate security of lives and property as police teams have been detailed to police the major expressways within the state,” Adejobi said.

     

  • Jaguar XJ drives 240km-long ‘Skyroad’ Expressway

    Jaguar XJ drives 240km-long ‘Skyroad’ Expressway

    Jaguar has taken its latest XJ to one of the world’s most spectacular modern roads – the ‘Skyroad’ in China – to find out how innovation in road technology and design is helping to match the improving ride of modern luxury cars.

    The 240km-long road, officially named the Yaxi Expressway, cost over 20b RMB ($3b), took five years to build and has become a tourist attraction as it snakes through spectacular scenery in Sichuan Province.

    The region, which is not only extremely mountainous, but also an active earthquake zone, required the road designers to utilise innovative thinking. Engineers solved the issue by using tunnels and viaducts to make up over half the length.

    Skyroad engineer Peng Li said: “Constructing modern roads is very challenging from a technology perspective because we have to keep pace with the development of the auto industry and there are many factors in the design of road surfaces and layouts.

    “In modern luxury cars like the Jaguar XJ, the passenger expectations are high. These cars are frequently chauffeur-driven and roads need to be designed to match the smooth ride and comfort engineered into luxury vehicles.

    “We incorporated a huge number of innovative technologies, materials and features to deliver this, including the world’s longest continuous slope of 51km, with an incline of 3 per cent, and the world’s first double-spiral tunnel, which optimises the experience for drivers.”

    One of the biggest challenges in the road’s construction was its location in a geologically unsettled region prone to earthquakes. This not only impacted construction, but also meant the design must be strong enough to withstand such potential natural disasters.

    “There were often many landslides, making construction very difficult,” added Li. “And in terms of design, it takes a lot of innovation to create an expressway to operate stably in an earthquake-prone region.

    The road has halved the journey time between Chengdu and Liangshan and opened up a region of China known for its tea production as well as pottery, flowers, silk, spicy cuisine and wild pandas.

    Jaguar spokesperson, Ian Hoban, said: “The XJ is the most luxurious car in our range and is designed both as a driver’s car and, in China particularly, for the chauffeur-driven market. Smooth ride, handling and rear seat comfort are all extremely important.

    “But it is not just the car that contributes to the handling, it is also important for our engineers to understand innovations in road design and optimise ride and handling to fit future trends in the construction industry.

    “One of the newest and most ambitious road construction projects in China enabled us to learn more about modern road design and to test out the XJ’s comfort, whether you are driving or working or relaxing in the rear seats.”

  • Lagos-Ibadan expressway is jinxed

    The rains are here. Thank God. The heat was becoming unbearable and many times I thought perhaps I was in hell because hell cannot be hotter than this. I hope America will experience the same kind of heat we had this year  in Nigeria to shut the loud mouths of those members of the Republican Party who deny the scientificity of global warming. Throughout the dry season from December 2015 to March, many of us anxiously looked forward to substantial work being done on the Lagos – Ibadan expressway. But alas nothing was done and hundreds of people are still dying needlessly on the most travelled road in Nigeria. Even if our government does not care for the people using the road, it should be concerned about the economic damage this bad road is doing  to the country. This road is the artery connecting the major port of Lagos which is also the economic nerve centre of the country to the north and other parts of the south of the country. Rudimentary knowledge of economics would indicate the fundamental importance of transportation in the life of a country. A country that is not in constant movement is a dead country. In our situation where we do not have railways, and where there is only primitive use of water-ways and our aviation leaves much to be desired, we just cannot do without tolerably good roads.

    We have been given some reasons for this delay ranging from various lawsuits in the courts to the need to secure adequate funding. The way things are going on in this country, we may die under the weight of irresponsible litigations. As for the lawsuits, there is need for out of  court settlement. The owner of the company suing the government is a well known patriot. Certainly, he will not like to be associated with a situation that has led to the death of many innocent struggling Nigerians whose only crime if crime it is, is that they  are struggling for their economic sustenance through the use of this jinxed road. This trajectory of out of court settlement must be embarked upon immediately. It is not one of these issues that must be allowed to linger on indefinitely. We just cannot wait. Any further deaths on the road is blood in the hands of those who should fix the road. If out of court arbitration fails, this government should be strong enough to damn the consequence in the public interest. I mean heaven will not fall! The government which owns the land should declare the company a trespasser and build the road. Enough of Turenci!

    I do not know how difficult it is for this government to borrow money for high priority and urgent infrastructural development. I am sure a loan can be easily syndicated through a consortium of banks that are daily declaring humongous profits. Funding a project like this should be regarded as part of their corporate social responsibility and support for  national economic recovery. If banks for whatever reasons would not lend to government, then the pensions commission should be approached to invest part of the trillions of Naira pension fund on the project on purely commercial basis. Their investment would be recovered by tolling the road and giving the power to collect the tolls to reputable banks rather than to government agencies to avoid sure and certain embezzlement.

    In a depressed economy like ours, road construction may actually be a panacea for employment and joblessness. In other words, we can kill two birds with one stone. I am therefore suggesting to this government a policy of country-wide road reconstruction as a way of reflating the economy, using if necessary, local banks as funding agencies and making sure all the roads are tolled. Priority roads all over the world are built and maintained in this way thus ensuring that road users pay for construction and maintenance of national highways. What Nigerians want is functionality of infrastructure. When available our people are prepared to pay for services. In the process of constructing these roads, young Nigerian civil engineers must be allowed to work along with whatever companies are given the contracts so that in future there will be a pool of people knowledgeable in road maintenance. The time has also come when we should begin to use interlocking cement and stone blocks in making critical roads to ensure  that they last long. This  policy  easily recommends itself because of our recent self-sufficiency in cement, thanks in this respect to private entrepreneurs like Dangote and Lafarge. I have said it before and I will say it again: one of our problems in Africa is that we are slaves to economic  orthodoxy. If something has not been done before, we are not prepared to try it yet the only way we as a country can make a mark in this world is to travel  the path least travelled. The greatest resource a country can have is its people. If well trained, they can be mobilized with committed and dedicated leadership to take their country to the highest point of development. We cannot say we do not have sufficiently well trained people to accomplish this rudimentary work of road construction.

    An  American academic colleague of mine  wondered recently  why Nigeria  does not have functioning infrastructure, railways, roads, reliable aviation, regular power supply and things that work generally considering the fact that there are Nigerians in the USA helping to build power stations and pipelines carrying fuel  across the country and also participating in the space projects. Nobody has an answer to our situation of arrested development. As I write this, there is pitch darkness where I am. The generator has broken down as any mechanical thing  is bound to do and the so-called privatized power companies have failed to generate and distribute power to my area of the country. Sometimes I worry if my grandchildren will in future be writing about power  after I would have passed on. There is no serious indication that this will not be the case unless God has mercy on us.

    I beg the people in authority to rise to the occasion and reconstruct this Lagos -Ibadan road and stop the carnage. I hope we do not get to a stage in this country when out of our collective frustration, citizens may be forced to take those responsible for this carnage to the world court to face charges of deliberate and premeditated murder of members of the traveling public.

    This article was written before the ghastly accident that took the life of Miss Rosemary Asuquo Nkanta an angel if ever there was one. This innocent soul came all the way from Jos where she was on the NYSC to join her former colleagues in REDEEMER’S UNIVERSITY  in FEAST of PRAISE (FOP) She was on her way to Lagos to fly back to Jos. She never made it. She was involved in an accident that took her life  near Sagamu.  She graduated First Class last September. The Nigerian condition killed this innocent soul. May God forgive all those who were directly or vicariously responsible for her death. Adieu Rosemary. May God condole your parents and all your friends and teachers at Redeemers University. You were one in a million.

     

    Corrigendum 

    My article on the Polisario Front last week contained an error. Instead of UNITA I wrote SWAPO. The Nigerian General who commanded UN troops  was Major – General Chris Garba. I omitted his first name.

  • 17 die in Lagos-Ibadan Expressway accident

    17 die in Lagos-Ibadan Expressway accident

    Seventeen people died and 74others injured in an accident on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway yesterday morning.

    The accident, which occurred shortly after Ibadan, involved two vehicles.

    There were 96 people inside the vehicles.

    The Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) gave the cause of the accident as over speeding, which led to loss of control by one of the drivers.

    FRSC’s Head of Media Relations and Strategy Bisi Kazeem, in a statement, warned people “against sitting on top of trucks and lorries”.

    Kazeem said: “The accident  occurred around  SEPO Area before Dominion University, KM 19 at 0915.

    “Two vehicles were involved– a DAF Trailer White, Reg. No. XS626 LSD and another articulated truck.

    “It was caused by speed violation and loss of control. There were 96 people involved (95 men, one woman.

    “Seventy four were injured; 17 died. The victims have been taken to UCH, Ibadan Central Hospital, Kejide and Life Back Hospital.

    “The bodies have been deposited at the Adeoyo Morgue, Yemetu, Ibadan.”

  • Lagos/Ibadan expressway will be completed in July 2017, says Infrastructure Bank boss

    Lagos/Ibadan expressway will be completed in July 2017, says Infrastructure Bank boss

    the Managing Director of Infrastructure Bank (TIB) PLC, Mr. Adekunle Oyinloye, has reassured users of the Lagos – Ibadan Expressway that work on the N167 billion project will be completed by July next year.

    Oyinloye, in a statement in Abuja after the bank’s board meeting, said motorists have nothing to fear about the completion date regardless of the current lull on the construction work.

    He promised that work would resume as soon as the legal issues surrounding the project were resolved.

    Construction work, he said, had already reached 30 per cent.

    He said additional financial commitments have already been secured from the project financiers through whom, he added, the initial N50 billion was raised for the project.

    He said that all the stakeholders on the project, including the Federal Ministry of Works, the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC) and the contractors – Julius Berger PLC and RCC – were determined to meet the completion date target.

    Oyinloye commended the perception of the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, on the state of infrastructure in Nigeria and the concept of Public Private Partnership in rescuing them from decay.

    He also announced plan by the bank to construct a 280-kilometre ”green-field dual carriage way” that will link Abuja with Ibadan through Kwara State.

  • Lagos-Ibadan Expressway

    Lagos-Ibadan Expressway

    •The Federal Government should find a solution to the legal minutiae of the deal and complete the road

    The delay in rebuilding the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, perhaps the busiest highway in the country, after several promises and attempts in the past decade, is unacceptable. We had several times condemned the regimes of Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo, Umaru Yar’Adua and most recently Goodluck Jonathan, for paying lip service to the urgent need to stop the daily loss of lives and properties worth several billions of naira on that road, arising from the accidents at its failed portions . To compound an already bad situation, a Federal High Court sitting in Lagos has reportedly set aside a purported new concession agreement on that road.

    The suit was instituted by Bi-Courtney High Way Services Limited that originally signed a concession agreement to build, operate and transfer the highway, an agreement purportedly cancelled in 2012. Before the cancellation, the Federal Government had claimed that Bi-Courtney had showed total lack of capacity to keep to its obligations in the agreement, while the company maintained that the Federal Government and its agencies had undermined the agreement in many respects, and as such had canvassed that the cancellation did not follow due process, and  was therefore illegal.

    Now, a high court has set aside the new concession purportedly made by the Federal Government in favour of Motorway Assets Limited (MAL) in January, 2015; even as the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC), a Federal Government regulatory agency, reportedly earlier this month denied any new concession to MAL. But amazingly, MAL early last month issued a statement that it was trying to raise the sum of N150 billion, as the second tranche of funds for the highway project, on the basis of a concession agreement in favour of the company by the Federal Government, on a build, operate and transfer basis.

    With claims and counter-claims by the contending concessionaires, the glaring inefficiency on the part of the agencies of government, not to talk of the palpable inertia on the part of the previous governments, are we likely to see a rebuilt Lagos-Ibadan Expressway anytime soon? That will depend on President Muhammadu Buhari and his new Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola. On our part, we expect the Federal Government to speedily untangle and resolve the contending issues, so that work can resume on site by the lawful concessionaire.

    As we noted, several lives and properties have been lost on this highway principally because the road at several portions had completely failed. On many such instances, trucks carrying fuel and other highly inflammable contents splash their contents on the highway, and at such occasions, the expressway turns into a convoluted hell fire, that often claims limbs, lives and properties. This should stop.

    To do this, the Federal Government, the contending concessionaires and the responsible agencies of government must quickly come to a compromise in accordance with the provisions of the law and due process so that that important national artery that links the nation’s economic capital with the north, south, east and western parts of the country could be properly rehabilitated for the good of all road users.

    With a senior advocate as the minister of works, we expect that all the legal loopholes would be plugged this time. If the Federal Government does not have the requisite funding capacity for the project, it should enter into an iron-cast concession agreement with a partner that has the requisite capacity to deliver on schedule. All over the world, public-private partnership has proved a veritable means of addressing infrastructure challenges, and there is no reason why the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway should continue to suffer neglect.

  • No new concession on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, says ICRC

    No new concession has been granted on the reconstruction of the Lagos-Ibadan Express-way, the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC), has said.

    In a statement, the Head, Communications, ICRC, Ms. Deborah Okafor, said to the “best of its knowledge, there has been no new concession  granted  as  required  by law and the National Policy on Public Private Partnership on Lagos Ibadan expressway,” saying news reports that Government  has  granted  a  new  ‘secret concession’ on the expressway  through  “a  back  door  arrangement,” are false.

    She  said after the termination of the concession granted to Bi-Courtney  Highway  Services  Limited,  the Federal Government decided to reconstruct  the  Lagos-Ibadan  expressway  as  a  traditional  procurement through  Engineering,  Procurement  and  Construction (EPC), adding however that the  government could not wholly  finance the project and had secured private financing from a consortium of banks to ensure the speedy completion of the road.

    According to her government  is  bound  to  repay  the financing arrangement (such as interest  payments, loan repayment, fees, charges and associated returns on equity  investment)  either  through  the  annual  budgetary system or from revenues  accruable  to Government if the operations and maintenance of the road is granted as a concession to a private party.

    If  and  when  the  Federal Government decides to grant concession over the operations  and  maintenance  aspect  of  the  project,  the  ICRC,  as the regulatory  agency,  will  ensure  that the project passes through a normal competitive  process  as  provided  for under the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (Establishment, Etc) Act, 2005 Act, (the Act) and the National PPP Policy on Public Private Partnership.

    The ICRC wishes to state further that: a) Any  PPP structuring over the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway can only take place  after the ongoing reconstruction is completed and handed over to the Federal Government.

    The  Federal  Ministry  of Works would then commence the process of procurement  of  a  competent  project  proponent  to  handle  the Tolling,

    Operations  and  Maintenance  of  the  road  in compliance with the Act and Policy,  which  requires that such a process must be done competitively and transparently.

    Any new concession over the road must, in due course, be certified by ICRC to have complied with the Act and Policy.

  • Expressway to hell: Commuters lament slow pace of works along Badagry Expressway

    Expressway to hell: Commuters lament slow pace of works along Badagry Expressway

    In what may be termed an endless suffering, commuters along the Lagos-Badagry Expressway currently under reconstruction in Lagos are crying out for a reprieve. Gboyega Alaka, who went on a fact-finding mission on the route, reports.

    Saturday October 31 may well go into Blessing Adamu’s diary as one to remember in a long time, albeit for a very bad reason. It was her favourite cousin’s wedding day and she had looked forward to the occasion, especially after the fanfare that was the traditional engagement two days earlier in Iba Estate, off Badagry Expressway. The wedding was billed for Underwater Events arena, Navy Town, Alakija, also along Lagos Badagry Expressway.

    She left her Egbeda home at 10am – which she considered quite early, having informed the groom that she wouldn’t be able to attend the church wedding.  She negotiated her way through Igando to Iyana-Iba in less than thirty minutes, but soon got stuck in an Okokomaiko-Alakija mini-bus that seemed to be taking forever to get to her bus stop.  She boarded the mini-bus a few minutes to 11am, but by 2.pm, she was still battling visible frustration in her corner and perspiring all over. To make matters worse, it was one of those tightly packed buses.

    In no time, she unconsciously began voicing her frustration and pain, to nobody in particular. “What kind of road is this? How can one spend three hours getting to ordinary Alakija here? A distance that ordinarily shouldn’t take more than ten minutes. What manner of road are they even constructing that is taking forever and causing one so much pain. And my husband warned me about coming through this route o. In fact, I should have listened to him and come in through Mile 2….”

    She went on and on and on.

    At this juncture, this reporter who was on a fact-finding mission on the road and seated next to her, started calming her down. Somehow, the driver got affected by her complaints and soon took a detour opposite the Lagos International Trade Fair Complex. The narrow road leads to Old Ojo Road, which also leads directly to Alakija bus stop; but rather than be palliative, it proved to be a worse option, with the drivers driving against traffic and creating a spectacle that can best be described as a cacophony.

    Interestingly, even the celebrator, who lives off Navy Town, had tacitly warned her on the Engagement Day, when he lamented after the ceremony that “Only God knows when we’ll get home today.”

    After another long odd hour at about 3pm, Blessing finally alighted at her bus stop, but anyone could tell that her mood had indeed been fouled. As she strutted along to catch a bike, this reporter imagined that it would probably take an overdose of mirth to get her lively again.

    Blessing’s case is just one of millions other road users suffering along this route. As a matter of fact, hers is even better, as her experience is only a one-off. But it put the predicament of permanent residents in that axis of Lagos, who have to ply that route at least twice every work day in bold perspective.

    The contract for the reconstruction of the Lagos-Badagry Expressway up to Okokomaiko was awarded in January 2012 by the Gov. Babatunde Raji Fashola administration. The plan was to rescue the very important road, often described by commuters as ECOWAS gateway, which had literally collapsed and become an eye-sore. It was to be reconstructed into a more adequate 10-lane international highway, to also include a light railway line, more commonly referred to as the Blue Line and provide a faster and more efficient mass transit to ease the perennial travelling pains of commuters in the area. Chinese company, Messrs China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation, CCECC was the beneficiary and it fixed a 36-month time lag, to terminate in January 2015, as completion date.

    A long way to go

    Going on a year after that final date, the road does not look anywhere near completion, thereby compounding road-users’ frustration. Only the first phase or Lot 1 starting from Babs Animashaun in Surulere to Mile2 had been fully completed as at the end of Gov Fashola’s exit from office. Phase 2A, which is between Mazamaza and Agboju had reached 90% completion, while phases 2B and 2C were at 45% and 10% completion respectively.

    Former commissioner for Works and Infrastructure, Kadri Hamzat made this declaration earlier in the year while fending off a claim by the federal government that the state could not lay claim to any infrastructural success outside those put in place by the federal government. He also attributed the slow pace of work by the contractors to factors such as challenge of relocation of PHCN pylons and NNPC pipelines, as well as the request for an expanded Right of Way (RoW). Amidst fears of abandonment, former Gov. Fashola also assured APC faithful and Lagos State citizens in general in days leading to the election that the project will not be abandoned by subsequent government, as his administration has put in place structures to ensure its completion.

    But it seems works has literally stagnated since then, raising more anxiety and grumble. As if to soothe frayed verves, incumbent governor, Akinwunmi Ambode earlier in the month renewed the government’s commitment to the project. He said the light rail project will be completed in twelve months. He reiterated that such project can never be abandoned, as it holds the key to more socio-economic development in the state.

    …And the suffering continues

    In the meantime, the citizens continue to groan, hoping as it were, that the promise this time will not fail.

    John Onwaeze a regular bus commuter on the route said the situation, to say the least, has been hectic. He said the road has always been a difficult one, but that the situation became aggravated since the reconstruction works commenced. “Okokomaiko here to Alakija is a distance that shouldn’t take more than 10 minutes, but now it takes an hour and about during the peak of traffic hours. There is a big diversion at Alakija that takes motorists to Festac through to Mile 2. The hold-up there usually builds up right to Okokomaiko, creating kilometres-long traffic and giving drivers and commuters hell. There is also the case of unruly commuter bus drivers plying Igando and Iyana-Ipaja, who make u-turn right on the expressway at Iyana-Iba, facing vehicles coming from the Mile 2 axis, and creating a deadlock in the process.

    Onwaeze continued, “Also at-Abule Ado, there is usually a nagging hold-up, that I really can’t figure its cause. In the past, it was the tankers, but that has been resolved since they were relocated, but the traffic gridlock persists.  There is also a diversion in that area though, maybe that is the reason. I think the main people causing the hold-up are the people working on the road. Sometimes, you just happen on a diversion without any visible warning. Ordinarily, if one is aware that there is a diversion, one would have taken an alternative route. In fact it got so bad one day that I had to get down from my bus and confront one of the Chinese men at work. I asked him ‘Is this how you people construct roads in your country? Is this how you cripple movement and literally halt all economic activities?’

    “I also asked him how it is that they are always quick to demolish houses but slow to constructing the roads. What I have observed is that even when they know that they may not get to an area in three months, they often hasten to demolish the houses and throw the inhabitants unto the streets.”

    Onwaeze said the Chinese guy was so embarrassed and could hardly offer any explanation. He however deduced from his attitude and the much is smattering English could avail him, that the delay may not be unconnected with unavailability of funds. “Obviously, there is little the company can do if the government does not fulfil its part of the contract.”

    On what he thinks of the recent governor’s declaration that the first phase of the road will be completed by 2016, Onwaeze said “That is the way it’s supposed to be, so that people will suffer less. But as it is now, I’m not sure that timeline is feasible. I don’t even know how many companies they’ve given the contract to, because a major road like this one that leads to ECOWAS countries, should have been awarded to at least three different companies, so that the work can be divided into parts and they can work simultaneously and deliver on time.

    Youthful Ehis says it is a mixed grill. Before the reconstruction even commenced, Ehis said traffic was always horrible on the road, which made people in the area heave a sigh of relief when the government announced plans to reconstruct and expand it. He said the people however didn’t bargain for what they’re presently going through, as the reconstruction seems to be taking forever. “Naturally there are times when the road gets freer and times when it is like a no-go area. 7 to 8am has always been hectic, and the pattern has only heightened with the commencement of works on the road. So we only hope they complete the work soon.”

    On what he thinks of the government’s new completion date of 2016, Ehis said “Obviously that is impossible. Don’t forget we are at the end of 2015 already; so going by the pace at which they’ve been working, I can tell you that’s a fairy tales.”

    Baba Kolo Muhammed said the situation on the road was hectic until recently when the U-turn around Volkswagen bus stop was blocked. He said it’s a lot better now, even though there is still room for great improvement.  “The problem on the road now is around Alakija bus stop. That is where we have the bottleneck now and on a bad day, it can be really chaotic. Once they clear that that part, things are likely to get a lot better. Now I get to Mile 2 within one hour, but that’s still not good enough. The government and the construction firm should speed up work on the road.”

    Nyma Akashat-Zibiri, one of the co-host of popular talk show on TVC, YourView also laments the terrible situation on the road and her tedious commuting experience every day. On one occasion penultimate week, she complained during the banter section of the programme that ‘The tankers are everywhere and on both sides of the road, down to Volks bus stop. So it’s like hell, moving out in the morning.’

    On another occasion last week, she outrightly said the little respite commuters on the axis seem to have enjoyed since the government filled some pot-holes on the road are back, as the rains in the last few weeks have swept away the government’s palliative effort. For that reason, she barely made to the show in time.

    ‘It’s a lot better, but…,’ say drivers

    Interestingly, most of the drivers spoken to seem to agree that the situation is a lot better.

    One of the drivers on the route who gave his name simply as Wasiu said “It’s a lot better now. As I speak with you now, the road is free. I think it’s largely because the rain has stopped. Now we use between 30 minutes and under one hour. In the past months, while it was raining, it was really hectic navigating the road, and we usually spend up to two and half, three hours to get to Mile-2 from Okokomaiko here. So one could say the gridlocks were due to the potholes created by the heavy rain. You know of course that once there are potholes and poodles, vehicles will move at a slower pace and a backlog of traffic will build up. If the road is smooth, even if it’s raining, vehicles will move freely.

    As if to corroborate the first driver’s position, Abayomi Taiwo, a Coaster bus driver on the route said ‘It’s not as if the holdup is perpetual. It has time. Now that a good number of people have gone to work (around 10am), you’ll discover that the hold-up is a bit better. What usually causes it, are commuters crossing. This is a heavily populated area and once humans are crossing, one is duty-bound to stop.   Amongst those crossing are also elderly people and young people. In the cause this, the traffic gradually begins to build until it becomes a nagging one. If the government really wants to be of help, I think they should build over head bridges and mandate commuters to use them.’

    Taiwo would therefore not place the blame of traffic gridlock on the road on the road construction, because, as he put it, ‘the construction has not yet got to Okokomaiko, yet there is traffic there.’

    To underline his claim that the situation is a lot better, Taiwo said it would take him around thirty minutes to get to Mile 2. He warned though that that same trip could take up to three hours during rush hour or on a really bad day.

    Overall, he said the construction is a good thing, except that the government never told them it would take this long.

    Another driver, Fatai Ojewunmi said ‘Now the hold-up has minimised. As at this time (10.30am), spend can get to Mile 2 under one hour. But at the height of traffic in the morning or evening, the same stretch takes between 2n to 3 hours. He ascribed the major cause of the traffic while going to Mile 2 to a spot around Mile 2 Oke. He said “Usually, we get into the traffic from Pako/Agboju Bus stop and follow it through to Mile 2 Bus stop, spending up to 30 minutes in the process. For this reason, most passengers alight out of frustration up to two kilometres ahead and take to trekking or motorcycle option to meet up with their appointment.”

    He also says it is a more difficult situation, coming from Mile 2 to Okokomaiko, saying some of the drivers make u-turns at wrong spots on the road, creating a nagging bottleneck for other road users. Good enough, he said the u-turn spots have been recently blocked, paving way for sanity on the road.

    ‘We’re committed to quick delivery’ – CCECC site manager

    An attempt to get an official response from the CCECC saw this reporter visiting their Alakija camp site. The Site Manager, a young Chinese man, who pleaded not to be named, said the company is doing its best to ensure that the works go smoothly and the people suffer less inconvenience.

    He said, “Usually, when there is going to be a diversion or blockade, we normally put signs a couple of metres or kilometres away to notify motorists, but the problem is that most of the time, a lot of them don’t read the signs and jus keep driving down. And when they eventually get to the point of the diversion, they discover they can no longer go further and start blaming the contractor.”

    He also stressed that the company need the cooperation of the federal government. “For example, there are some spots where we have NNPC pipelines, which automatically halt our movement. It is a major problem and we need the appropriate agencies of the federal government to come to our aid and help relocate the pipelines. And don’t forget, there are also the problems of electric poles and pillars that have to be relocated.

    Pressed further to respond to allegations of deliberate delay outside places where there are pipelines and electric pillars, the manager said “The rain is a problem sometimes. Sometimes we fix the road for quick passage of vehicles and the rain comes and sweeps away our effort and a bad spot that has been fixed becomes bad again and people blame us. Also, from here to Okoko, there are many trailer parks and when we do quick fixes to the roads, the trailers destroy them, and traffic becomes slow again.”

    To buttress the company’s commitment to quick delivery, he said “You will realise that works from here (Alakija) to Mile 2 and further down, is almost complete. You’ll also realise that the work has been faster in recent time.”

    On the 2016 timeline, he said “At the end of this year, we should be through with the works from Mile 2 to Alakija, and all things being equal, we can finish by next year.” He finished off in his smattering English.