Tag: Fashola

  • Fashola: work on four power plants to be accelerated

    Fashola: work on four power plants to be accelerated

    The Federal Government yesterday said it will accelerate work on four hydropower plants in order to boost electricity supply in the country.

    Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola (SAN), said government will increase work on Gurara hydropower plant phase one and phase two, Zungeru, Dadin Kowa and Mambilla power plants to solve the energy problem.

    Fashola said continuous vandalism of gas pipelines and infrastructure across the country had forced government to explore other alternative sources of energy.

    The minister, who spoke at the launch of Building Energy Efficiency Guideline (BEEG) for Nigeria, assured that developing alternative source of energy by government would make it impossible to hold Nigeria to ransom in future by controlling any particular source of fuel for electricity.

    Fashola said: “We have seen from events that started from around the 14th of February this year, repeated acts of vandalism on our gas pipelines and infrastructure that renders us clearly vulnerable to one source of fuel for our energy development.

    “That has challenged us to develop options, alternatives – solar in particular and of course hydropower plants in more quantitative response. So we will be accelerating work on project like Gurara hydropower plant phase one and phase two. Work has started on Zungeru hydropower plant. We will also be accelerating work on Dadin Kowa power plant, as we will on Mambilla power plant which will give us the biggest single electrification source over a period of seven years that it is estimated to take to conclude it.

  • FG to intensify work on four power plants – Fashola

    FG to intensify work on four power plants – Fashola

    The Federal Government on Thursday said it would accelerate work on four hydropower plants in order to boost energy supply in the country.

    Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola (SAN), stated that government would increase work on Gurara hydropower plant phase one and phase two, Zungeru, Dadin Kowa and Mambilla power plants to solve Nigeria’s energy problem.

    Fashola said continuous vandalism of gas pipelines and infrastructures across the country had forced government to divert to other alternative sources of energy.

    The minister, who spoke at the launch of Building Energy Efficiency Guideline (BEEG) for Nigeria, assured that embarking on alternative sources of energy by government would make it impossible for anybody to hold Nigeria to ransom in future by controlling any particular source of fuel for electricity.

    The minister said: “We have seen from events that started from around the 14th of February this year, repeated acts of vandalism on our gas pipelines and infrastructure that renders us clearly vulnerable to one source of fuel for our energy development.

    “That has challenged us to develop options, alternatives – solar in particular and of course hydropower plants in more quantitative response. So we will be accelerating work on project like Gurara hydropower plant phase one and phase two. Work has started on Zungeru hydropower plant. We will also be accelerating work on Dadin Kowa power plant, as we will on Mambilla power plant which will give us the biggest single electrification source over a period of seven years that it is estimated to take to conclude it.

    “To us, this is a journey of diversification, a journey of electricity security for Nigeria, it is a journey that has already started and it is a journey that will ensure that in future, it will be impossible to hold this country to ransom by controlling any particular source of fuel for electricity.”

  • Work to begin on Lagos-Ibadan  expressway next week, says Fashola

    Work to begin on Lagos-Ibadan expressway next week, says Fashola

    Minister of Power, Works and Housing Babatunde Fashola has announced that work on the Lagos-Ibadan expressway will begin next week.

    His counterpart in Information and Culture Ministry, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, assured Nigerians that the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration was on track.

    They spoke yesterday at the inaugural town hall meeting in Abuja.

    The ministers explained that while there was still much work to be done, the administration has the political will, discipline and determination to fulfil its electoral promises and take the country to greater heights.

    Other ministers at the event are Ministers of Budget and National Planning Udo Udoma; Agriculture and Rural Development Audu Ogbeh and Environment Amina Mohammed.

    Fashola said government was working on formalities and standards for the smooth implementation of its mass housing plan.

    The minister, who lamented the ongoing vandalisation of oil pipelines, expressed the determination of government to deliver on steady power supply.

    The information minister hailed Nigerians for their perseverance and patient with the administration.

    He added that the Federal Government would not shy away from its electoral promises.

    Fashola announced that the first rollout of the 500,000 Social Intervention Scheme of the administration will start tomorrow.

    “I believe that my only sin is talking too much before the elections and I now have to pay the price.

    “The first one was held in Lagos. Any meaningful assessment must be situated within the right context.

    “We campaigned on three broad areas: corruption, revamp the economy and security. Have we met our targets? If you ask me, I will say we are on track.

    “When we came in, many local governments in the Northeast were under the control of Boko Haram. They hoisted their flags; they were even collecting taxes. But today, not even a single local government is under the control of Boko Haram.

    “We have been able to liberate 16,000 captors from the enclave of Boko Haram,” the minister explained.

    Mohammed assured that the change the All Progressives Congress-led (APC) administration promised “is real”.

    He said: ‘‘We acknowledge that the nation is passing through a very difficult situation at this time, with the loss of over 60 per cent of our national income due to the crash in the price of crude oil.

    ‘‘Though Nigeria has faced the challenges of ethno-religious violence, armed robbery, cattle-rustling, kidnapping for ransom, militancy and violent agitations, the most daunting security challenge faced by the country when we assumed office on May 29, 2015, was the Boko Haram insurgency.

    ‘‘The administration is also tackling other security problems with the same decisiveness, whether is it cattle-rustling, herdsmen/farmers’ clash, militancy and regional agitations.

    “We are not only desirous of communicating to Nigerians, we are actually taking practical steps to address issues.’’

    The minister of budget and national planning said his ministry had put a mechanism in place to track the efficient implementation of the 2016 budget in tune with the change agenda of the government.

    He appealed to Nigerians for patience.

    The forum was meant to allow the government to give account of its stewardship to the citizens and also engage directly with them on burning national issues.

    The first edition of the town hall meeting was held in Lagos on April 25.

    The Federal Government had also held the town hall meeting in Kaduna and Kano.

    The next edition is slated for Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital, on Monday.

  • Fashola’s cross

    The tragedy of a single story has been well documented from time immemorial. The folly of a single narrative that makes many men form strong opinions on issues, people and circumstances. However, a single narrative has sometimes defined men of principled character and indefatigable temerity. Such men are few in Nigeria. Very quickly, the few ones that threatened to cast themselves in such mould fade like comets on a dark night.

    When Babatunde Raji Fashola burst onto the scene, he was relatively unheralded. After receiving the blessings of the seasoned pro-democracy titan, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, who had governed Lagos admirably for eight years, he was ushered into office. He wasted no time in proving the doubters wrong and leaving the critics embarrassed as he strode like a colossus reshaping, reorganizing and reinventing Lagos. Citizens far and near chorused the name of this revolutionary that took on the notorious ‘Oshodi’ by the scruff of the neck and revamped it before our very eyes. His colleagues looked on in envy, as he seemed to project the famed Midas touch. Indeed, the subtle clamour for a Fashola presidency rang loud along the citizens’ corridor. Our very own Lee kwuan Yew in the making.

    Moving forward, the All Progressive Congress won the May 2015 elections and the rest is history. Our dear Fashola emerged the Minister of Power, works and housing. I remember sitting in front of the television, pregnant with excitement, as his portfolio was reeled out by the President himself.  The despair of waiting so long for the ministerial list was immediately assuaged by this announcement. In spite of all these optimism I couldn’t help remembering the fanfare that had greeted the appointment of the great ‘Cicero’, Bola Ige. It was a tale of hope dashed and promises unkept.

    This appraisal may appear coming early in the day but its not.  It’s a well known saying that the early footsteps can predict the outcome of a journey.  No matter how hard or fast you run on the wrong track you are unlikely to reach your destination. I sincerely admire the man Fashola and I want him to succeed. At this critical juncture in our nation’s existence we need patriots and visionaries not just technocrats. According to Marcel Proust, the real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new lands but seeing with new eyes. The current blueprint for power as its currently being implemented cannot work. The honourable minister claimed the power privatisation process is faulty. And I agree with him. The paradox now is why the Federal Government doesn’t immediately kick-start legislative and legal mechanisms to revisit the entire privatisation process. You can’t build something on nothing. It’s clear even to the most undiscerning eyes that the current distribution companies (DISCOs) and generation companies (GENCOs) lack the capacity to deliver. The sponsored advert in one of the nation’s daily that the GENCOs were helpless due to pipeline vandalism is the final straw. The farce called power sector privatisation is the most ridiculous I have ever heard of. You literarily foist a company on a particular region without competition and without recourse to any other option. This can’t be called liberalisation. This is economic slavery. A power policy that is essentially gas driven yet no coherent gas policy and pipeline protection clause was factored into this arrangement!

    I don’t blame Fashola for this nor do I blame the APC led government but I blame the dearth of ideas, the lethargy, the lack of political will to think outside the box in solving the problem. Most of all it saddens me that the government appears to have resigned to fate. No Nigerian in all honesty minds an increase in the electricity tariffs as much as the injustice of paying more for power that is non-existent. As a metered consumer I probably won’t raise any hue and cry as long as I only pay for services rendered. It is another matter entirely when I’m on estimated billing and I don’t see power for a cumulative three days in a month yet I have to pay for darkness. Where is our sense of fairness and justice? For the first time majority of Nigerians heard of system collapse that crashed our power generation to zero! Yet Nigerians on estimated billing still paid for this power collapse and the ‘saviours’ that bought over the power sector still smiled home to the bank. Their monies guaranteed in spite of glaring inefficiency. Even the old NEPA was never this bad.

    The well-worn ballad about funding has been heard for far too long. Over N2.7 trillion was spent on our power sectorbefore privatization. The problem has been how it was spent and the ever-present corruption that has taken permanent residency in our country. As regulators of the sector, what penalties have been issued to the GENCOs and DISCOs for underperformance in the last one year? Instead we gifted them with “a cost reflective tariff”.  We haven’t seen any concrete attempt to create a service performance template by which the GENCOs and the DISCOs are being benchmarked. What happens when a DISCO consistently defaults or demonstrates lack of capacity to deliver? Will the gas pipelines be privatized as well, knowing this is an integral part of the entire power sector reform puzzle for now? These are burning questions begging for answers.

    The only sustainable power sector reform is one that is hinged on an energy mix that incorporates hydro, solar, wind and coal. This has been well articulated by the power minister. I would implore the government to divest the maximum creative energy and will power to this sector. It would make or mar this administration. Indeed it’s been often said that solving the power problem is key to unleashing the huge productive potential of a giant that has slumbered for far too long.

    Fashola taking on this assignment was always going to be a potential banana peel. Many have tried and failed spectacularly. The critics have started baring their fangs as usual. Some have even suggested that his performance in Lagos was a fluke. That Lagos was set up for success. This is another narrative in the unfolding story of the man Fashola. A reputation so arduously built hangs perilously in the balance. The onus rests on him to come out of this unscathed.

     

    • Olayinka writes from Ilorin, Kwara State.
  • Fashola, go easy on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway

    Fashola, go easy on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway

    The Honourable Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Raji Fashola, SAN, is one of the shining lights of President Buhari’s cabinet. A ‘super minister’, the former Lagos governor has been given three major ministries, each of undeniable significance to Nigerian lives. And to whom much is given, much is expected, as the saying goes. He has much to prove, and so he walks the talk, to show that he is a man with a plan. But in so doing, he cannot be seen to be riding roughshod over the intricacies that attend those areas over which he superintends. He must act with a deep sense of responsibility and due regard for the law and the principles of natural justice.

    This note of caution does not come a moment too soon. Fashola has been firing from all cylinders over the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, often sending mixed signals. Hardly anyone can contradict what he said in a speech in December 2015, that, “Good roads will help reflate and grow our economy, reduce travel time, cost of transportation of goods and services, and restore jobs that have been lost to transport dependent services. They will improve safety of lives and property and our security index.”

    The minister followed up with his speech of January 22, at the Nigerian Pension Industry Strategy Implementation Roadmap Retreat, in which he signaled the willingness to use Pension funds for the provision of infrastructure. The speech sparked an ideological debate among Nigerian intellectuals including Kayode Komolafe, Chidi Amuta and Femi Falana; and caused a concerned Olusegun Adeniyi to ask: “Can we really take a risk with the Pension Fund to drive development, as suggested by Fashola, even with all its implications?”

    The pension speech was illuminating in showing the moral and legal quagmire successive Nigerian governments have got themselves into over the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, arguably the most important road artery in this country. Government has tied itself up in knots with the many controversial executive U-turns over the road, and Fashola as Works Minister in the current administration, allowed his befuddlement to show in his speech.

    Hear him: “The Lagos-Ibadan Expressway is a story of what investors don’t like.” He can say that again. In his summary of how an otherwise historic concession agreement went awry between the Federal Government and Dr. Wale Babalakin’s Bi-Courtney Highway Services Limited, tagged “Company A” in the pension speech, Fashola conceded that it was no way to treat an investor. Noting that “local investors are the most important in any economy,” he observed that the unceremonious cancellation of Bi-Courtney’s concession was “a not welcoming message” to foreign investors.

    However, in expressing these concerns,. Fashola did not seem to be entirely clear as to the trajectory – not to mention the causative factors – of the convoluted matters relating to the road through which he must now forge a path for the benefit of Nigerians. He suggested that Bi-Courtney’s first recourse should have been arbitration and not the courts; and went further to imply that a suit brought by the thwarted concessionaire caused the cessation of works on the road.

    In a letter dated January 25, Babalakin drew Fashola’s attention to the erroneous detail in his keynote speech. For in a letter from exactly three years before, dated January 25, 2013, Bi-Courtney had written to Fashola’s predecessor at the Ministry of Works, Arc. Mike Onolememen, asking Federal Government to set up a Dispute Resolution Board as provided for under the concession agreement. Government should work in continuity, and Fashola ought not to have been ignorant of the fact that the ministry under Onolememen blatantly ignored Bi-Courtney’s overture. The company was therefore left with no choice but to seek the intervention of the courts.

    As stated in Babalakin’s letter to Fashola: “The court that set aside the so-called Finance Agreement acted in the only manner available to it. Courts cannot continue to condone acts of government that are demonstrably irresponsible if we have to sustain our democracy and develop our economy.” The letter also debunked the suggestion of a nexus between Bi-Courtney’s court action and the stoppage of work by contractors put in the frame in a questionable manner by the former administration of President Goodluck Jonathan: “How could an order obtained on 14th December, 2015, be responsible for work that had stopped about seven months earlier?” asked Babalakin.

    Since the pension speech, we have had a lot of motion without movement, an all too familiar scenario for road users who ply the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway. The minister has made statements about what he plans to do with the road, while exhibiting a worrying disregard for a concessionaire who has stood by the rule of law, in the hope that justice and reason will prevail. No longer mindful of his earlier declared approach of “not going into the merits and demerits of the FGN’s cancellation of [Bi-Courtney’s] concession”, Fashola now says he will “fix” the road. The clouds over the budget have dissipated finally, and government money will now be pumped into the construction.

    Fashola would rather expend taxpayers’ money, in a depressed economy,on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway when he can go back to basics, and revisit the aberration of a wrongfully cancelled arrangement concerning which the concessionaire cries for justice after losing $300m. “Why should the developmental process of Nigeria and the lives of Nigerians be held in abeyance because you are in court?” Fashola now asks.

    It is truly disheartening to hear this from a Senior Advocate of Nigeria. Is it the man who goes to court that has stalled Nigeria’s development, or the government that impedes societal progress in a flagrant disregard for the law? Is this the change we are selling? Meanwhile, Nigeria has lost its place as the erstwhile Third Fastest Growing Economy in Africa, and does not even figure among the Top 15 – according to the IMF’s World Economic Outlook for 2016. The World Bank’s Doing Business Report 2016 also ranks Nigeria as one of the worst countries in the world to do business. Instead of mitigating these dire reports by working to reengineer a business friendly environment, government seems bent on giving one of the country’s most courageous investors a drubbing. But at what cost? Why are we so blest?

    One is minded to agree with Babalakin when he writes that, “The investment climate of Nigeria has been bedevilled by the short-sighted actions of public officers, especially when dealing with the rights of investors. So many investors have been totally ruined by the utterances and actions of public officers which are detrimental to the development of investor confidence and consequently have an adverse effect on the growth of the Nigerian economy.”

    Fashola needs to set aside political considerations, perchance there be any, and act purely in the interest of Nigeria; and sit down with the erstwhile concessionaire to forge a path through the debacle that is the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway. Fashola’s legacy as Buhari’s ‘super minister’ depends on it, and future generations will thank him if he chooses the right path.

     

    • Dr. Famojure runs a landscaping business in Lagos State.
  • Fashola and road contractors

    SIR: That above was an appeal made by the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN) at a meeting with contractors handling federal road projects preparatory to their remobilisation to their respective sites for the completion of the various abandoned road construction/rehabilitation projects that dot the nation’s landscape. This report was monitored on the 9pm NTA news on Monday May 16. This appeal by Fashola to contractors calls for serious concern from Nigerians. If this has been the practice with road construction prior to the government of CHANGE, it should be changed forthwith.

    It is not the duty of contractors to ensure standards. It is the duty of contractors to make maximum profits and any means, including underhand dealings, is fair to them in the attainment of this aim. It is however the duty of the project owner – the federal government in this case – to ensure that infrastructure projects are executed in compliance with approved design and standards. This is done by the appointment of competent owner’s engineers to be the federal government’s eyes and ears on the projects. In making a case for the appointment of owner’s engineers, we emphasise that utmost stock should be placed on competence and professionalism.

    The federal government plans to spend N220Billion on roads in 2016. It is suggested that capacity development for young Nigerians engineers be derived from such a huge expenditure. This can be achieved by attaching civil engineering graduates and interns to these projects. This, apart from providing practical skills for otherwise unemployed engineers, is also an avenue for providing employment even if on an ad-hoc basis pending the delivery of the projects.

    President Muhammadu Buhari promised us a country that we shall be proud of. He also enjoined that we should buy Nigeria to grow our economy. However, there were more foreigners, as contractors, in the meeting with Fashola than there were Nigerians. The Federal Government is well advised to walk the talk by being proud of Nigerian professionals and to buy Nigeria in the procurement of infrastructural projects. If indigenous engineers are not challenged, it is unfair to accuse us of non-performance. Bishop David Oyedepo of the Faith Tabernacle challenged the Nigerian engineers in the design of Winner’s Chapel auditorium and the Nigerian engineers rose to the challenge and delivered the project with only Made-in-Nigeria materials in record 12 months.

    We make bold to state that the foreign engineers practicing in Nigeria are not even among the best in their countries. The best foreign engineers do not ply their trade abroad. In most countries, foreign professionals are not allowed to practice without obtaining the local certification. Why is it that in Nigeria, all sorts of foreign technicians are allowed wears the toga of chief engineers without having local certification? Instances abound where the so-called foreign experts deployed to Nigeria at huge cost are unable to achieve the aim of their deployment without the inputs of their Nigerian counterparts.

    The ministry of power, works and housing should also enforce the defect liability clauses in the various contracts to ensure that upon the completion of the various projects, any portion of the respective roads that fails within the defect liability period is fixed by the contractor at no cost to the government.

    The Nigerian Society of Engineers has more than the adequate technical resources and competences and is ever ready to partner the federal government in the delivery of durable infrastructural projects. The NSE is also hereby urged to be unrelenting in advocating for a better deal for the Nigerians engineers while not sparing any effort to sanction practitioners that compromise competence and professionalism.

     

    • Lateef Salami,

    Lagos.

  • Nigeria ready for nuclear energy, says Fashola

    Nigeria ready for nuclear energy, says Fashola

    The Federal Government has expressed its readiness to commence the production of nuclear energy.

    The Minster of Power, Works and Housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola, who spoke in Abuja yesterday said Nigeria had secured the necessary certification from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

    “This thing has protocols and standards; we are already in it; we are not venturing into it; we started a nuclear programme 17 years ago.

    “We have gone through the training level; we have produced 25 graduates of master’s level under certification by the IAEA.

    “We have found the sites; the sites have been approved, two sites have been approved by the IAEA. We have started the design for the financing; that is the stage we are now; once we conclude that, we move to the design for the construction.

    “If all things go well, by quarter four of next year – that is the schedule that I met – we should have started construction, so that is what I meet,“ Fashola told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    The minister said it was important for Nigeria to focus on the gains and safety of nuclear energy as obtained in other developed countries.

    He said since the whole world was moving toward a cleaner fuel and the use of more sustainable energy, Nigeria could be an exception.

    He, however, said the developed countries could only share the technology with countries ready keep to the standards in the utilisation of the technology.

    Fashola further said diversifying the nation’s energy mix would lead to the utilisation of the various forms of renewable energy sources in the country.

    This, according to him, will ultimately make electricity cheap in the country.

    He said: “What we are thinking about is long-term solution. We need a solution that will endure for generations to come.

    “When you design a power solution, design it so that the next coming generations can use it.”

    He said the ministry and other agencies under his supervision were working hard to ensure that Nigeria obtained the best in the electricity industry through strict regulatory responsibilities.

    On the monthly meeting with stakeholders in the industry, Fashola said it was designed to evolve better ways of managing the industry, adding that it was yielding the desired results.

    Fashola also admitted that the Land Use Act is not defective because it is serving the purpose for which it was enacted.

    He however noted that the administration of the law was its greatest challenge.

    He therefore said any review of the Act should be done at the state level because land administration is on the Residual List.

    The minister explained that there were no plans to amend the Land Use Act of 1978, saying land administration is the exclusive preserve of the states.

  • Only NASS can approve tollgate – Fashola

    The Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, on Wednesday said only the National Assembly has the power to re-introduce toll gates as additional source for funding road maintenance.

    Fashola said this while fielding questions at the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) Forum in Abuja.

    He said the government had no power to re-introduce toll gates unless the National Assembly gave legislative approval.

    “If we have those legislative approvals in parliament, it means that Nigerians have voted for tolls,” the minister said.

    Fashola said he would sustain the reform work that the previous administration had commenced on how to fund roads.

    He, however, noted that for tolls to achieve its purpose, the existence of secure payment platforms and effective monitoring capacity would be able to prevent leakages.

    “Some of the policy documents that I inherited were road sector reform, including how to fund roads.

    “It may help Nigerians to decide which way to go.

    “In terms of leakages, again, Nigeria has progressed significantly and there is much more capability to monitor such payments.

    “There are also many more secure payment platforms.

    “Therefore, the integrity trail of the payment to avoid leakage is easier to monitor,’’ Fashola added.

     

  • FEC okays Dangote for Lokoja-Ilorin road construction

    FEC okays Dangote for Lokoja-Ilorin road construction

    The Federal Executive Council (FEC) on Wednesday approved the proposal for business mogul, Aliko Dangote, to construct Lokoja-Obajana-Ilorin Road.

    Dangote Cement’s Obajana factory is located along that axis.

    In return, Dangote will hold back 30 percent of his company’s income tax for some years.

    ‎The Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, disclosed this to State House correspondents at the end of FEC meeting presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    He was accompanied by the Ministers of Information, Lai Mohammed; Labour, Chris Ngige and Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami.

    He said: “We presented a memo to council for consideration. The memo seeks to take benefits of the existing policy and regulation. It seeks to take benefits of tax policies, tax laws for the purpose of using them to drive infrastructural development renewal.

    “So we presented a proposal by one of the subsidiary of Dangote group, a construction company, for the construction of a section of Lokoja-Obajana-Kabba-Ilorin, specifically the section between Obajana-Kabba Road using cement as demonstrative of how perhaps we should continue to build going forward in order to reduce maintenance on the road and the company proposing to fund the construction of that section of the road in exchange for some tax remissions.

    “Companies are ordinarily suppose to pay income tax‎. There are existing policies in our laws which enable government to consider and give taxes incentives.

    “So  Council consider and approved the proposal for Dangote construction company to build that section of the road because the tonnage of cement being produced from the factory has increased and the traffic in that area has increased, there had been unfortunate accidents also.

    “So it is a total economy policy which council considered and approved because it gives support to industry, it enables us take benefit of our tax law to renew infrastructure at a time we are really challenged for resources to finance all our routes. It also enables us to save lives by quickly and urgently rebuilding that road so that other commuters who also depend on that road for their livelihood would also benefit from the road.”

  • Deliver quality roads, Fashola tells contractors

    Deliver quality roads, Fashola tells contractors

    Minister of Power, Works and Housing Mr. Babatunde Fashola has appealed to contractors to return to site and deliver quality roads in line with international standards.

    Fashola spoke in Abuja yesterday when he met contractors handling the country’s major highways.

    While he acknowledged challenges confronting the contractors, the minister said with the budget approved, the ministry will soon offset the arrears owed contractors as soon as disbursements and releases are made. This, he said would enable the contractors re-engage their workers and return to site.

    Fashola and the contractors also made the following resolutions at the meeting: “To immediately mobilize to site in anticipation of payment;

    “Re-engage as many of their staffs that were laid off;

    “Improve the standard of roads as well as provide road furniture, including signage,

    kilometre milestones, etc.”

    They also agreed on the need for the government to explore the possibility of alternative financial arrangements to pay for projects not captured in the 2016 appropriation.