The Federal Government Of Nigerian has started a $41bn railway
expansion to reduce dependence on oil and
diversify the economy. The
contract for the repair of the Itapke-Ajaokuta-Warri rail link was
approved By the Federal Executive Council of Nigeria
The plan’s key projects include building a second railway line
connecting the nation’s two biggest cities, Lagos and Kano. The
1,100-kilometer (680-mile) line will carry freight and passengers making
logistics easy for Nigerians. The government also wants to construct a
rail line that will connect Lagos to the eastern city of Calabar.
The two new railways are expected to cost $20bn, with most of the
funding coming from the Export-Import Bank of China, which has so far
released $5.9bn. The China’s Civil Engineering and Construction Company
is handling the projects and both railways should be ready by the end of
2019. While General Electric Company is leading a group to rehabilitate
Nigeria’s 3,505 kilometers of century-old, narrow-gauge railway linking
the coastal cities of Port Harcourt and Lagos with the North.
The group, including SinoHydro of China, South Africa’s Transnet SOC
Limited and the Netherlands’ APM Terminals BV would fund, revamp and
operate the railways for a period to be decided by the government.
Nigeria, Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed,
who briefed State House correspondents at the end of the FEC meeting
presided over by the Acting President, Yemi Osinbajo, put the cost of
the Itakpe-Ajaokuta-Warri rail contract at $122,616,582 inclusive of
all taxes at the prevailing Central Bank of Nigeria’s exchange rate of
$1 to N305.
The contract, spanning 15 months, would include the completion of 12
rail stations. The council also approved a ‘letter of comfort’ to the
General Electric for the concession of the narrow gauge railway system
with the government targeting the haulage of one million tonnes of goods
by rail this year.
Nigeria, Ministers for Transportation had approached the Federal
Executive Council on the approval for a letter of comfort so that by
October this year, the country would be able to begin the full
utilization of the Lagos-Kano narrow gauge, Calabar, Port Harcourt,
Maiduguri line.“ This is to necessitate the efforts to rehabilitate the
30,000km narrow gauge lines so that ease the logistics of hauling goods,
from one location to another and also remove a million tonnes of goods
from our roads.
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