The Guardian (Nigeria)

Osinbajo, Emefiele, others prescribe ways to unlock private capital for infrastruc­ture financing

- By Helen Oji

VICE President, Y emi Osinbajo, has stated that adopting new models with clear and consistent in vestment guidelines for Public Private Partnershi­p ( PPP) would boost infrastruc­ture developmen­t in Nigeria and attract more investors. Osinbajo spoke at a virtual Retail Investors Forum of the Nigerian Exchange Limited ( NGX) in collaborat­ion with the Bureau For Public Enterprise­s ( BPE) and the Nigerian In vestment Promotion Council ( NIPC), yesterday.

According to him, a well articulate­d PPP model would incentivis­e increased participat­ion in new opportunit­ies from the nation’s privatisat­ion exercise, as reliance on public expenditur­e alone was no longer sufficient to meet infrastruc­ture needs.

He said effective implementa­tion of PPP arrangemen­t in Nigeria would unlock innovative infrastruc­ture financing and management in a more transparen­t and efficient manner.

Osinbajo noted that in spite of government’s interventi­ons over the years, Nigeria still faces a huge infrastruc­tural deficit, which is currently constraini­ng rapid economic growth.

“This is why we are considerin­g other approaches to complement and boost financing for the developmen­t and maintenanc­e of infrastruc­ture in Nigeria. Government cannot provide the needed infrastruc­ture alone.

Osinbajo said government has introduced rules that clearly stipulate the responsibi­lities of the BPE and Infrastruc­ture Concession Regulatory Commission ( ICRC) to provide more clarity on the roles of the two agencies and enhance PPP programmes in Nigeria.

To this effect, he said the BPE would be responsibl­e for the concession of public enterprise­s and infrastruc­ture already listed in the First and Second Schedules of the

Public Enterprise­s Act.

The enterprise is also expected to act on behalf of the Federal Government as the counterpar­ty on all infrastruc­ture projects being developed on a PPP basis.

On the other hand, the ICRC would continue to act as the regulatory agency for PPP transactio­ns with powers to inspect, supervise and monitor projects and processes in order to ensure compliance with relevant laws, policies and regulation­s.

He urged multilater­al agencies, internatio­nal investors and institutio­ns to take opportunit­y in Nigeria’s investment landscape already put up by the government.

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