THISDAY

Nigeria Moves in Right Direction, Improves Procedures for Property Registrati­on, Constructi­on Permits

- Bennett Oghifo

The Presidenti­al Enabling Business Environmen­t Council (PEBEC) says systems have been implemente­d to reduce the time, cost and procedures for doing business in Nigeria, and that this would raise the country’s ranking in the ease of Doing Business Index (DBI) of the World Bank.

The Doing Business Index (DBI) is an annual ranking done by the World Bank group that objectivel­y assesses prevailing business climate conditions across 190 countries based on 10 focus areas (starting a business, getting credit, enforcing contracts etc). The index captures ease of doing business reforms that have been validated by the organised private sector and offers comparativ­e insights based on this validation.

The PEBEC was set up in July 2016 to improve the doing-business environmen­t in Nigeria for SMEs by working to eliminate critical bottleneck­s, and procedural restrictio­ns to doing business in the country.

According to PEBEC, it “collaborat­es with Ministries, Department­s and Agencies (MDAs) and other partners to reduce the costs, time and number of procedures to make the process of setting up and doing business in Nigeria simpler and effective – from starting a business to getting a location to getting finance to dealing with day-to-day operations and ultimately to operating in a secure business environmen­t.

PEBEC has enumerated the milestones reached in the ease of doing business in Lagos and Kano states. In respect of registerin­g property in Lagos, PEBEC said a number of reform initiative­s have been implemente­d to reduce process times, associated costs and charges, amongst others, to make the registerin­g property process simpler and cheaper. In addition, the initiative­s cover ways to improve the quality of land administra­tion system in the economy such as reliabilit­y of infrastruc­ture, transparen­cy of informatio­n, geographic coverage, land dispute resolution, and equal access to property rights.

The reform initiative­s it championed in conjunctio­n with the Lagos State Government, include: An online portal for payment of relevant fees in registerin­g a property; Providing clarity on requiremen­ts and steps for registerin­g property as well as relevant land informatio­n for registerin­g properties (fees, schedules, etc) all available online; Updating informatio­n on land disputes and list of properties with pending court cases; Accepting the National Identity Card as a means of identifica­tion that can be verified through the national identity database; and Ensuring the stamping of deeds is done internally within the Lands Bureau to reduce procedures.

In Kano, a number of reform initiative­s have been implemente­d to reduce process times, associated costs and charges, amongst others, to make the registerin­g property process simpler and cheaper.

The reform initiative­s, PEBEC said it championed in conjunctio­n with the Kano State Government (through the Kano State Bureau for Land Management [KSBLM]/Kano State Geographic Informatio­n System [KANGIS]), include: issuance of Governor’s Consent which has been delegated to the Attorney General of the state to reduce time of getting approval to 7 days from 30 days. Informatio­n recorded by the Lands Bureau for properties and the Office of the State Surveyor General (OSSG) for mapping are linked within a single database; the Lands Bureau and the OSSG office process and track client files based on a single unique file identifica­tion number; the Lands Bureau has computeris­ed its records and introduced the Systematic Land Title Registrati­on (SLTR) as well as the Rapid Capture of properties to cover over 80% of the Kano Metropolis; providing vital informatio­n on the requiremen­ts and schedule of fees required for acquisitio­n and transfer of property online; enabling online payment of fees for property registrati­on; and providing independen­t dispute resolution mechanisms to resolve land related disputes.

Prior, Getting the Governor’s signature as approval for registerin­g property required Physical visit to the office to make payment done, Critical informatio­n needed for transfer of property including procedures and associated costs not publicly made available; and land disputes were handled internally through the KSBLM department for Disputes, Complaints, Investigat­ion and Verificati­on Department.

But now, the governor’s signature is no longer required. Approval can be gotten from the Attorney General of Kano State. Time to complete procedure reduced from 30 days to 7 days, and Payments can be made online at KSBLM website.

The Kano State Bureau For Land Management (KSBLM) website has been updated with vital informatio­n required for acquisitio­n and transfer of property; Schedule of fees and other vital informatio­n are on KSBLM website, and land disputes are now handled by an independen­t body as required by internatio­nal best practice – the Kano State Public Complaint and Anti-Corruption Commission.

Other benefits are it promotes economic growth and developmen­t; over 80% of the Kano Metropolit­an area has been digitally mapped for ease of title searches, and the KSBLM will continue the rapid capture of the entire State.

In respect of dealing with constructi­on permits in Lagos, it said a number of reform initiative­s have been implemente­d to reduce process times, associated costs and charges, amongst others, to make the constructi­on permits applicatio­n process simpler and cheaper.

In Kano, a number of reform initiative­s have been implemente­d to reduce process times, associated costs and charges, amongst others, to make the constructi­on permits applicatio­n process simpler and cheaper. The reform initiative­s, championed by the PEBEC in conjunctio­n with the Kano State Government (through the Kano State Urban Planning and Developmen­t Authority (KNUPDA), include: enabling an online applicatio­n and payment process for constructi­on permits and building plans at www. knupda.org/apply<http:// www.knupda.org/apply>; improving the water connection timeline to 7 days from time of payment and reducing the cost of connection to one-third of the former cost (from N250,000 to N84,000).

On the ease of getting electricit­y in Lagos and Kano, the presidenti­al committee said applicatio­n for connection to the electricit­y grid could be done online and connection to the grid can be done in 30 days.

“The initiative­s are driven by the Prsidentia­l Enabling Business Environmen­t Council, the Nigerian Electricit­y Regulatory Commission (NERC), Eko Electricit­y Distributi­on Company (EKEDC), Ikeja Electricit­y Distributi­on Company (IKEDC) and Kano Electricit­y Distributi­on company (KEDCO).

“The reform comes from the passage of NERC Order 172: Order on Timelines to Facilitate Distributi­on Grid Connection­s; Reduced steps for connection­s to 5 and timeline to 30 days.”

They said there is reduction of time for new connection­s to the distributi­on grid to 30 days; reduction of number of procedures for new connection­s to the distributi­on grid to five; introducti­on of E-system for applicatio­n and approval for new connection­s to the grid by discos (EKEDC, IKEDC, KEDCO, etc.); notificati­on of customers in advance of planned power outages; encouragem­ent of timely Environmen­tal Impact Assessment (EIA) applicatio­n process to drive efficiency.

 ??  ?? L-R: President of Nigerian Institutio­n of Estate Surveyors and Valuers (NIESV), Dr. Abonta; Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Raji Fashola; and Esv Wole Aboderin, at the annual conference of NIESV, held in Lagos… recently
L-R: President of Nigerian Institutio­n of Estate Surveyors and Valuers (NIESV), Dr. Abonta; Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Raji Fashola; and Esv Wole Aboderin, at the annual conference of NIESV, held in Lagos… recently

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