Tag: NRC

  • NRC demolishes illegal structures, resumes cattle cargo service

    The Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) yesterday brought down about 2,000 illegal structures  along the lju/Agege rail line in Lagos.

    The demolition  was in preparation for the corporation’s resumption of cattle cargo or cattle traffic services, Mr Jerry Oche, Lagos Railway District Manager (RDM), told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    The  cattle transportation is scheduled to resume today.

    Cattle traffic by rail is especially done from the northern parts of Nigeria to the southern states.

    Oche said: “This exercise is a prelude to the resumption of cattle traffic from the north to the south by rail, after so many years.

    “The cattle would be moved from Gusau in Zamfara State to Agege in Lagos aboard special wagons because of the peculiarity of the animals we are moving.

    “This resumed operation is of immense significance to the corporation, hence all RDM’s within the northern and southern districts are required to give the operation serious attention.’’

  • NRC and oil marketers

    •It is in the interest of both to work together

    Like many public establishments, the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) that used to be a place of pride to work a few decades ago went comatose due to neglect by the Federal Government which has a monopoly of rail transportation in the country, and corruption. However, with the rekindled interest of the Muhammadu Buhari administration in reviving the rail system, one would naturally expect oil marketers to grab the opportunity because of the burden that would be taken off them in transporting their products. They have been moving their products over long distances by road due to the poor state of rail infrastructure.

    However, the disclosure by the acting managing director of the corporation, Engr. Fidet Okhira, that the oil marketers have expressed worries over the integrity of NRC’s rail tracks and tankers, as well as what happens to the road trucks that they procured when rail transportation was unreliable, is troubling. Nonetheless, they are legitimate fears.

    Mercifully, the corporation said it has taken care of its own end by importing about 40 tank wagons even as it has worked on the integrity of its tracks and tankers. The other challenge concerning the fate of the trucks is also not insurmountable. A way must be found round it because transportation of products, fuel inclusive, especially over long distances is better done by rail. That is the way to go.

    Indeed, that would be the essence of government’s plan to link all sea ports in the country by rail. The Lagos-Calabar route, for instance, is targeting all sea ports. This means all imported products would be transported by rail. This will in turn free the roads, thus making them last longer, reduce accidents as well as the cost of doing business, among other advantages. Of course it would also lead to job creation since people must be employed to run the rail services.

    We will better appreciate the prospects of movement of fuel by rail when we consider that NRC can move 20 tank wagons at once, each with about 44,000 litres of fuel. This translates to about 880,000 litres which, according to Okhira, would go a long way in meeting the fuel needs of a city like Kano in a day. The maximum a tanker can carry is about 33,000 litres of fuel. With 880,000 litres per trip by rail, that is about 27,000 tankers off the roads.

    This appears tantalising. But, still, what happens to the road trucks that the marketers purchased to move their products when rail services were unreliable? These, as Okhira explained, won’t be useless. Rather, they could be used to move the products from, say Kaduna to Sokoto where rail cannot reach, after it would have been transported by rail from Lagos to Kaduna. We see some sense in this arrangement because, as we said earlier, it would take a lot of pressure off the roads.

    There are prospects in the collaboration between the NRC and oil marketers. The details can be worked out or fine-tuned. Indeed, it is not only oil marketers that should be encouraged to move their products by rail. Every organisation that is connected with importation of goods should be interested in partnering with the NRC to move their products.

    Since privatisation appears to be the way forward even for the rail sector, we urge that the ongoing process at the National Assembly to privatise the sector be accelerated. The statute that makes rail transportation a Federal Government prerogative has outlived its usefulness; it should therefore give way to allow private investors interested in the sector.

    It is good that the railway corporation has decided to employ locals as junior staff to maintain the rail tracks. It would not be a bad idea to extend this to senior cadres where suitable candidates exist to fill such vacancies in the areas to create a sense of belonging that is necessary for security of the infrastructure.

  • NRC takes delivery of five standard gauge coaches

    THE Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) yesterday took delivery of five new standard gauge coaches in its effort to modernise railway operations.

    NRC’s Acting Managing Director Mr. Fidet Okhiria received the coaches at the Lagos Port in Apapa.

    He said the contract for the supply was awarded by the Federal Government last year.

    The delivery includes three 80-passenger capacity standard coaches, one 56-passenger capacity executive coach and one Parcel/Guard Van coach.

     Okhiria, who was represented by the Acting Director of Mechanical, Electrical, Signal and Communication, Mr. Kabir Zayyana, said the coaches would be deployed by May on its standard gauge operation between Kaduna and Abuja.

    He said: “We have received from our contractor the coaches, which we are going to use to run our standard gauge line from Abuja to Kaduna.

    “The ship arrived on March 2, and we started off-loading them since Wednesday, and they will be moved from Lagos Port to Abuja by road.

    “We have off-loaded five coaches, comprising of one executive coach which has 56 capacity, three other coaches with 80 passengers capacity and one Guard Van.

    “Latest by May, commercial operation on the train will start on that corridor and our passengers should look forward to higher degree of comfort.”

    He said the speed train would be operated by the corporation’s workers, stressing that they were well-trained to handle the new stock.

    According to him, a locomotive driver can drive both standard and narrow gauges, saying that they would only need training on timing.

    Zayyana said the corporation would transport the coaches by road because they could not travel on the existing narrow track.

    He said that the coaches were 1437 mm as against 1067 mm of the narrow gauge.

    On the NRC’s plan for maintenance of the new stock, the acting director assured Nigerians that the corporation would study the maintenance manual of the coaches.

  • Okhiria is NRC new chief

    Mr Fidet Okhiria, Director Mechanical, Electrical, Signal and Telecommunications of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) has emerged as the acting Managing Director of the Nigerian Railway Corporation.

    Okhiria, an engineer, takes over from Adeseyi Sijuwade, whose regime came to a sudden end on Monday, in a Tsunami that shook 26 parastatals of the federal government.

    The new helmsman, who it was learnt had led some management officials of the corporation to Abuja on Tuesday, promised his total commitment to the ongoing transformation of the Nigerian Railway Corporation.

    Sijuwade, an engineer, came on board as the Managing Director of the Nigerian Railway Corporation in August 2010, and had gotten his tenure renewed in 2014 by the last administration of President Goodluck Jonathan due to the legacy efforts he made to reactivate the dead corporation.

    He was into the second year of his second term when he was axed on Tuesday.

     

  • Fuel scarcity: NRC reduces Ogun-Lagos rail shuttle

    The biting fuel scarcity has forced the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) to reduce its daily shuttle services on the Ogun-Lagos route from 12 to eight.

    NRC Lagos District Manager Mr Akin Osinowo, in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday, said the reduction only affected the intermediate services.

    “Our return intermediate services at 12 noon and 2p.m are being suspended for now.

    “We have no option than to suspend these services because we are finding it difficult to run our normal services, due to fuel scarcity.

    “We will return to normal services when fuel supply returns to normal,’’ Osinowo said.

    According to him, the corporation uses about 32 litres of fuel for its Ogun-Lagos services weekly.

    “But now, we are sourcing for fuel everywhere to ensure the running of Ogun-Lagos services even after the reduction in our number of services from 12 to eight.’’

    Osinowo, who declined comments on whether the long distance and cargo services would also be suspended, appealed to commuters for understanding.

    NAN reports that there was a rush by passengers at the railway terminus at Ijoko in Ogun yesterday for train services.

    A NAN correspondent at the terminus reports that the train was congested as commuters struggled to board.

    It was so bad that many passengers resorted to hanging on the locomotive.

    Many who could not get places inside the coaches and could not hang on the train were stranded at various stations.

    “I’ve no option than to go back home because it’s quite expensive to go to Lagos by public transport,’’ a nursing mother, Ronke Alayo, said.

    Commuters went for the Diesel Motorised Unit services, costing N750, which they hitherto shunned because of its high cost.

     

  • Top NRC officials to monitor train service

    Top NRC officials to monitor train service

    The Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) has deployed its top management staff to monitor intercity train services, following passengers’ complaints.

    The exercise meant to improve its services began last month, following this newspaper’s exclusive details of its poor service especially on its Lagos to Kano route.

    The corporation’s spokesman Mr Abdulraouf Akinwoye who disclosed this, said the move is to check the excesses of NRC’s officials and stop the delays on long distance shuttles.

    Akinwoye said the corporation will continue to give its best to passengers based on available resources.

    He said: “At our yearly review we decided that it is time we move out and frontally confront all those issues that our customers have usually complained about especially those on long distance trains.

    “Beginning from last month, all directors, deputy directors and assistant directors have been mandated to be following our intercity shuttles and at least two officers must go on such trains and they are not only to note the bottlenecks along the way, but to resolve them without further delays.”

    The monitoring, Akinwoye said, started on the Western Line which runs from Lagos to Kano, adding that the exercise will soon begin on the Eastern Line (Enugu to Gombe), which started operation in January.

    He said the Managing Director, Adeseyi Sijuwade, is not leaving any stone unturned in ensuring that passengers enjoy the services of the corporation.

    “We are determined to improve our efficiency and to give the best to the masses that are our major targets,” he said.

    Akinwoye added: “Our top officials being on the train, is admittance that things are not right with our services especially on our intercity shuttles. It therefore will help us check many things that our customers complain about and protect them from further embarrassment.”

    He said a lot has changed between last year and now, adding that passengers would no longer experience those challenges hitherto facing the corporation.

    Akinwoye, charged the passengers to do more to protect the corporation’s properties because they are costly.

    According to him, it is sad that toilets, bathrooms, seats, hand rests, and our overhead orbit fans are being vandalised by passengers. He said anyone seeing these would blame the NRC without any blame put on its passengers.

    “Our passengers should take the railway properties as theirs because it is our commonwealth that was used in procuring them. People should stop hanging on the train and the roof riders should desist as this is causing more damage to the coaches,” he said.

    On workers’ welfare, the NRC spokesman said the management and the two labour unions, have agreed on a package which has been sent to the board.

    Akinwoye said the NRC management will continue to motivate its workers to give their best to the industry.

  • Top NRC officials to monitor train service

    Top NRC officials to monitor train service

    The Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) has deployed its top management staff to monitor intercity train services, following passengers’ complaints.

    The exercise meant to improve its services began last month, following this newspaper’s exclusive details of its poor service especially on its Lagos to Kano route.

    The corporation’s spokesman Mr Abdulraouf Akinwoye who disclosed this, said the move is to check the excesses of NRC’s officials and stop the delays on long distance shuttles.

    Akinwoye said the corporation will continue to give its best to passengers based on available resources.

    He said: “At our yearly review we decided that it is time we move out and frontally confront all those issues that our customers have usually complained about especially those on long distance trains.

    “Beginning from last month, all directors, deputy directors and assistant directors have been mandated to be following our intercity shuttles and at least two officers must go on such trains and they are not only to note the bottlenecks along the way, but to resolve them without further delays.”

    The monitoring, Akinwoye said, started on the Western Line which runs from Lagos to Kano, adding that the exercise will soon begin on the Eastern Line (Enugu to Gombe), which started operation in January.

    He said the Managing Director, Adeseyi Sijuwade, is not leaving any stone unturned in ensuring that passengers enjoy the services of the corporation.

    “We are determined to improve our efficiency and to give the best to the masses that are our major targets,” he said.

    Akinwoye added: “Our top officials being on the train, is admittance that things are not right with our services especially on our intercity shuttles. It therefore will help us check many things that our customers complain about and protect them from further embarrassment.”

    He said a lot has changed between last year and now, adding that passengers would no longer experience those challenges hitherto facing the corporation.

    Akinwoye, charged the passengers to do more to protect the corporation’s properties because they are costly.

    According to him, it is sad that toilets, bathrooms, seats, hand rests, and our overhead orbit fans are being vandalised by passengers. He said anyone seeing these would blame the NRC without any blame put on its passengers.

    “Our passengers should take the railway properties as theirs because it is our commonwealth that was used in procuring them. People should stop hanging on the train and the roof riders should desist as this is causing more damage to the coaches,” he said.

    On workers’ welfare, the NRC spokesman said the management and the two labour unions, have agreed on a package which has been sent to the board.

    Akinwoye said the NRC management will continue to motivate its workers to give their best to the industry.

  • NRC acquires new rail buses, trolleys

    The Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC) has acquired two new multi-million naira air-conditioned 16-seater rail buses and 18 five-seater motorised trolleys.

    The rolling stocks, it was learnt, would improve the response time of the corporation’s engineers and technicians to emergencies especially in inaccessible areas along the rail network system.

    Speaking while taking reporters round the equipment, NRC Managing Director Adeseyi Sijuwade said they would be deployed in the engineering and signals and maintenance units.

    Their acquisition, he said, would further improve response time to blockages of rail tracks or total breakdowns that needed urgent attention.

    With the buses, he said, engineers would have easier and quicker means of commuting within the rail network without waiting for the regular passenger trains.

    The engineers, he said, would be able to address issues quicker and fix challenges that might arise in any section of the rail system.

    The buses, Sijuwade said, were an addition to NRC’s fleet, adding that  they would be deployed for inspection and maintenance.

    The trolleys, Sijuwade said, would be allocated to railway maintenance engineers to facilitate regular tracks inspection and maintenance.

    “With these, our men can use the buses on inspection and maintenance shuttles within the system and they can also be deployed to carry out specialised trainings on the corporation’s operations,” he said.

    Sijuwade explained that the trolleys were a departure from the pump trolleys inherited from the colonial masters which must be pumped at regular intervals by the operators before they could move.

    Among others, the new trolleys, Sijuwade said, are fitted with Automotive Gas Oil (AGO), engine, and can carry five workmen, which means more hands, to handle the repairs, unlike the old pump trolleys that carry two persons. They are also fitted with tools wagon at the back to store tools and materials, and a wind visor.

    Sijuwade said 12 of the trolleys may be deployed in the western line, which is the corporation’s busiest corridor; the other six would be deployed to the Eastern line.

    He said though more of these equipment would still need to be obtained by the corporation, the ones already delivered would go a long way in assisting the corporation deliver more service to Nigerians.

    He said: “These trolleys are the vehicles that we are going to issue out to all our track maintenance engineers, to ensure that all our tracks are cleared and maintained. This becomes imperative especially when you realise that most of our tracks are not accessible by road. That is why the men must be equipped to ensure that they have easy access to any section of the tracks that may require their attention and repairs at a short notice.”

    Sijuwade said the equipments  would reduce passengers’ nightmares especially during breakdowns or track upgrading, adding that their acquisition is critical to the success of train services nationwide.

    He said the equipment, which were designed to run on the existing narrow gauge, have been tested by the corporation’s engineers adding that they would soon be deployed to the various sections and divisions for use.

  • Rail line rehabilitation 90% completed, says minister

    •Begins new shuttle service in Lagos

    The rehabilitation of the narrow gauge rail lines throughout the country are over 90 percent completed, the Minister of Transport, Senator Idris Umar, has said.

    Umar, who spoke in his office, disclosed that the rehabilitation was the first phase of the 25-year strategic master plan for the Nigeria Railway. He said the overhaul would promote  efficiency.

    The resuscitation of the railway by the Jonathan administration, Umar added, has created over one million jobs, both directly and indirectly in the last four years.

    The minister said the jobs were created through the ongoing construction of new rail lines and the rehabilitation of existing ones which is a key component of the railway’s transformation agenda.

    He noted that tied with the railway transformation is the desire to reposition the nation’s economy for the overall benefit of Nigerians.

    He said: “When this rehabilitation is completed, the Nigeria Railway would be able to increase its efficiency and this will no doubt have positive impact on the state of transportation which is presently experiencing tension as a result of the pressure on the roads.”

    He said so much is taking place simultaneously in the railway subsector and when all eventually come on stream, the government would have been able to hand over to Nigerians, a modern, safe and reliable means of transportation in which they can be proud.

    He said development appeared to be on the slow pace in the sector because the sub-sector is capital intensive and most of the hardware and rolling stocks are produced strictly on demand.

    Meantime, the NRC has added a new Train Shuttle Service (TSS), to be known as “short – hop” between Ikeja and Apapa to its growing array of mass transit services.

    The service, which took off yesterday, November 10, will cost N400.

    A statement by Mr. Muyiwa Adekanmbi, the Ikeja District Public Relations Officer, said, the shuttle was designed to relieve passengers’ stress on the roads due to traffic snarl which usually characterise these two major bus terminals in Lagos State.

    Adekanmbi listed the various stopping stations along the route, to include Iganmu, Ebute – Metta Junction, Yaba, Mushin, Oshodi and Ikeja, when the take-off is from Apapa and vice-versa.

    He said: “The time schedule for the train service aimed at promoting individual or group bookings for a quick, stress-free and reduction in journey time trip from Ikeja at 12:45pm and 4:15pm, while the train is scheduled to take off at Apapa at 11:30am and 3:15pm.

    He said the service is meant for passengers intending to embark on a faster and time saving travel time from two of the most famous commercial hubs in Lagos.

    “This adds up as part of effort being put in place by the Management of the Corporation to relieve the stress intending passengers experience on our roads due to gridlock which characterise these two main points from where the train will be initiating and disembarking. This is also expected to help reduce congestions on Apapa road which constitute a major headache for users of that road following various reports from the public,” he said.

    The newly purchased Diesel Multiple Units (DMU) will be used for this service. The DMU have remarkable features such as air conditioner, enough leg room, and comfortable seats among other unique qualities. They were incorporated into the services of the NRC early this year.

  • Multi-billion Naira tank wagons rot on rail tracks

    The 40 tank wagons imported between 2012 and 2013 by the Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC) for the haulage of petroleum products from the Apapa Ports to other locations are rotting away at the railway yards.

    Some of the wagons are at the Apapa Yard. Others were sighted at the Ebute-Metta work yard.

    The corporation, as part of strategic upgrading of its services, took delivery of the tank wagons in 2012 and  2013.The first 20 came in 2012. The last 20 were delivered last year. Each has an inbuilt capacity of 100,000 litres of petroleum products. The 40 wagons could haul four million litres of petroleum. They cost billions.

    The wagons are expected to relieve the roads of heavy trucks that weaken them and decongest the ports and Apapa roads of petroleum tankers. Each tanker’s maximum capacity is 33,000 litres.

    The Federal Government’s initial enthusiasm about the new deliveries and their capacity to transform haulage of this essential commodity across the country, especially to the North, had been shortlived as it has been hampered by other factors.

    The wagons, it was discovered, has not been functioning because most of the tank farms around Apapa are not accessible. Many of the oil marketing companies were said to have flouted the planning regulations while constructing their tank farms by failing to build rail access into their facility.

    Though officials of many of these oil companies refused to comment on the issue when contacted, a top official of the NRC who spoke on condition of anonymity, said, virtually all the tank farms at Apapa are guilty of building their farms without consideration for the use of railway, making their farms inaccessible to rail services.

    “Out of all the oil majors operating tank farms in Apapa, only Mobil and Oando are said to be accessible and are presently hauling products from their farms through the railway.”

    He said the failure to link these tank farms with the rail lines caused a delay in the realisation of the goal of hauling petroleum products by rail.

    The Director, Mechanical, Electrical and Signal, Mr. Fidet Okhiria, an engineer, who corroborated this assertion, said the corporation was addressing the issue by laying rail tracks through all the tank farms in Apapa.

    He said: “By the time the tracks are laid into these tank farms, thousands of tons of cargo and oil would be lifted weekly and this will assist in decongesting Apapa and take the pressure off the roads.

    He said taking oil by rail from Lagos to Kano can be done within 72 hours, and urged oil firms to take full advantage of the service.

    “We believe our customers would have more confidence in us after upgrading these tracks. This is because it would assure them that we have reliable tracks and wagons, and can better safeguard their commodities,” Okhiria said.

    “What we are doing now,” he said, “is that we are setting the tracks into the fuel dumps that hitherto had no tracks for easy access.  They are on railway land and the agreement is that they should carry their products through railway.”

    He said this phase would be completed by November.

    “The contractor has assured us that the laying would be completed by November. When this is completed, we would erase the complaints by some of our prospective customers that the present system is more costly and are using that excuse to continue to patronise tankers,” Ohhiria said.

    He said though the rail tracks are still the narrow gauge, they have been upgraded from 60 pap to 85 pap, which makes the tracks stronger and could withstand the pressure assoc

    “We are changing the tracks from 60 to 85 rail pap. So instead of the rail tracks breaking off as a result of heavy load or pressure, it will endure.

    “We have two types of rails in Apapa. The first category is tracks for passenger service while the other is for cargo service. We access containers from cargo tracks. In Apapa, only the Flour Mill factory complied and that’s why their products are being evacuated to the North through the rail. We presently load about 600, 000 tons of goods from Flour Mills per month to Kano.