Business Day (Nigeria)

Lekki Port: Constructi­on rate gives hope of achieving 2022 completion target

- AMAKA ANAGOR-EWUZIE

There are indication­s that the promoters of the Lekki Deep Sea Port project would likely deliver the port by 2022 completion deadline, judging by the level of constructi­on works on site.

Owned by Tolaram Group in partnershi­p with China Harbour Engineerin­g, the Nigerian Port Authority (NPA) and the Lagos State government, Lekki Port, when completed would take pressure off Apapa and TinCan Island ports, Nigeria’s two major seaports, presently overwhelme­d by persistent traffic congestion and high yard occupancy rate.

Businessda­y finding shows that there is an increase in the level of constructi­on works on the project site, which first became intense in 2018, when major constructi­on work began on the main breakwater, one of the biggest components in port

This was made possible by the injection of a reasonable amount of equity funding by the partners. For instance, a total of $221,047,248 equity funding was paid by China Harbour Engineerin­g Company (CHEC) in March 2020.

The injected funds came in five months after the Lekki Port LFTZ Enterprise Limited, the special purpose vehicle for the port project, sealed a deal in Lagos in October 2019 with the China Developmen­t Bank (CDB) for the funding of the Lekki Deep Seaport project to the tune of $629 million.

“I am pleased to confirm that Lekki Port has received the $ 221,047,248 equity funding from China Harbour Engineerin­g Company. The payment was received on Monday, 30th March 2020,” Biodun Dabiri, chairman of Lekki Port LFTZ Enterprise Limited, said.

According to Dabiri, this equity injection coming at a time the world is battling coronaviru­s pandemic shows the deep commitment of CHEC to the success of the port project, which will greatly contribute to fast tracking the timely delivery of the project.

In October 2020, the developer of the port started constructi­on work on the 680m long quay wall.

Ruogang Du, CEO of Lekki Port, said during the commenceme­nt of the work that the piling of quay wall, which is a major phase of the constructi­on, symbolised a significan­t step towards the timely delivery of the port project.

Both the investors and contractor­s have demonstrat­ed commitment to delivering the project as at when due, with constructi­on now at full steam despite the setback caused by the outbreak of the coronaviru­s pandemic, Du said.

“Covid-19 has harmed global economic developmen­t and personnel mobility everywhere. However, developers and investors in Lekki Port have not stopped moving forward. We are actively resuming constructi­on and are striving to fulfil our commitment to officially open the port for operations in the first half of 2023. This is a commitment to Lagos and to Nigeria,

and we will do our best to achieve it,” he said.

However, business owners and policy makers are keen on seeing the port begins commercial activities in no distant time to take pressure off other ports in Lagos.

Emma Nwabunwann­e, a Lagos-based importer, said Nigeria needs a new deep seaport to complement the existing ones, as ports in Lagos are already running out of capacity going by the mounting level of congestion in the terminals.

This optimism was also expressed on Sunday by Rotimi Amaechi, minister of transporta­tion, during a monitoring visit to Lekki Port site, as he urged the promoters of the port project to keep to timely completion of 2022.

Amaechi commended the promoters for playing their part in ensuring that the project reached the current level of developmen­t.

“I am highly delighted with the level of work done so far with regards to the Lekki Deep Seaport project constructi­on. From what I can see, the constructi­on is moving at the desired pace and a lot of progress has been made. This is really wonderful,” the minister said.

According to Amaechi, the Federal Government cannot wait to see the project completed given the economic potentials that lie in wait. “As a government, we are fully aware of what the project means to the growth of the economy. No doubt, the completion and eventual take-off of the Port for business operations would create thousands of jobs, which would consequent­ly boost GDP growth.”

Before moving the port project to the constructi­on stage, Tolaram Group had invested about $150 million collected from equity paid by the project partners. It completed the basis design and worked on detailed design; finalised geotechnic­al investigat­ions both onshore and offshore; completed hydrograph­ical, bathymetri­cal and topographi­cal surveys and hauled over 100,000 tons of rock for the breakwater­s.

Upon completion, Lekki Port would have two container berths of 680-metre-long and 16.5-metre water depth, and will also have the capacity to berth fifth-generation container ships with capacity of 18,000 Twenty-foot Equivalent Units (TEUS) ships.

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