Babatunde Fashola, Minister of Works and Housing, briefed
State House correspondents after a virtual FEC meeting presided over by Vice
President Yemi Osinbajo on Wednesday at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
Fashola said that the NNPC tax deployment would not be a
one-off payment but periodic and gave the projected commitment to the road
projects as N621.2 billion.
The minister said that the roads would cover a total
distance of 1,804.6 kilometres.
He said there was an Executive Order 7, signed by President
Muhammadu Buhari, allowing private sector operators to identify infrastructure
such as roads for which they would deploy in advance the taxes that they should
have paid.
“You recall that I had briefed you here about the use of
that policy by the Dangote Group on the Obajana to Kabba and Apapa to
Oworonshoki.
“Earlier this year, there were five other roads, the Kaduna
Western Bye-pass, the Lekki Port Road, the road from Sagamu through Papalanto
and a couple of others like that.
“So, today we have another player; we have other interested
players who are showing interest but we haven’t concluded.
“But we have another player who has shown interest and
committed to deploy taxes and it is the NNPC.
“So NNPC has identified 21 roads that it wants to deploy
some of its tax liabilities to,’’ he said.
The minister said that the instructive thing about the
initiative was that it would help the government to achieve many things,
including Ministerial Mandate Three and Four, which were discussed at the
recent retreat.
He said that the Ministerial Mandate Three was energy
sufficiency in electric power and petroleum energy distribution across the
country.
According to him, petroleum energy distribution is being impacted
positively and negatively by the transport infrastructure, which is the
Ministerial Mandate Four.
“So, NNPC has sought and council has approved today that
NNPC deploy tax resources to 21 routes covering a total distance of 180.6km
across the six geopolitical zones.
“Out of those 21 roads, nine are in the North-Central,
particularly Niger State; and the reason is that Niger State is major storage
centre for NNPC.’’
He said that NNPC’s gesture would facilitate petroleum
distribution across the country as Niger experiences gridlock every year.
Fashola said that the Niger governor had been complaining
that his roads were being damaged by trucks.
He said that drivers, after damaging the roads with their
overloaded trucks, would turn round to protest against the damage they had
caused.
“So, they are nine like that in the North-Central; three in
the North-East, two in the North-West, two in the South-East, three routes- the
entire Odukpani-Itu-Ikot-Ekpene road in lots one, two and three now, fully
covered.
“Then, in the South-West, you have the Lagos-Badagry
Expressway, the Agbara junction, and you also have Ibadan to Ilorin, the
Oyo-Ogbomosho section.
“In the South-East, you have the Aba-Ikot-Ekpene in Abia and
Akwa Ibom; so that is a major link; then you have Umuahia-Ikwuano-Ikot-Ekpene
road again and so on so forth.
“So, in the North-West, it is Gadar Zaima-Zuru-Ganji road
and also Zaria- Funtua-Gusau to Sokoto Road.
“In the North-East, it is the Cham-Numan, Bali-Serti and
Gombe-Biu Roads.
“The road impacted in the North-Central, include
Ilorin-Jeda-Mokwa-Bokani sections one and two; Suleja-Minna sections one and
two.
“Bida-Lambata Agaie-katcha-Baro road and
Mokwa-Makera-Tagina-Kaduna boarder in Niger State, Minna-Zungeru-Tegina road,
and Bida-Minna road-all in Niger State; as I said, a total of 21 roads.’’
The minister said that the move by the NNPC would resolve
the financing problems regarding the execution of the road projects.
He said, for instance, that the Aba-Iko-Ekpene road had an
estimate of about N30.3 billion in it while the provision in the budget was
N200 million.
“If you look at the Suleja-Minna road, Section 2, it has
N25.76 billion to complete it; the provision in the budget this year, is just
N100 million.
“So, with these interventions, all those roads will be fully
funded; you don’t have budgetary challenges and financing challenges anymore.
“So, council approved this as strategic funding for this
road network.’’
Fashola said that another memorandum related to road was
also presented to the council, with regard to a section of the Calabar-Ikom-Ogoja
Road, the section linking Akpet Central.
He said there was a problem with the steel reinforced drains
on the road.
“Those drains were put there about 42 years ago and 86 of
them have failed.
“We need to replace them now with concrete ring drains to
allow water to flow; otherwise, the retention of water badly impacts the road.
“As a result of that, we had to revise the scope of works
from rehabilitation to construction in order to remove all the old steel drains
that are corroded and replace them with concrete drains, over 75 km of road
network.
“That required an augmentation of the contract by an
additional sum of N12 billion; that memo was approved,’’ he said.
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