THISDAY

El-Rufai Urges FG to Use Bills of Quantities, Outlaw Engineerin­g Measuremen­t, Evaluation

- Bennett Oghifo

Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai has advised the federal and states government to ensure that national procuremen­ts for infrastruc­ture are at par with global standards with the use of “Bills of Quantities” as the exclusive document for costing of projects instead of Bills of Engineerin­g Measuremen­t and Evaluation (BEME).

The governor, who gave the advice in Abuja Saturday night while serving as Chairman of the Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors (NIQS) President’s Business Dinner, explained that the BEME document was alien to internatio­nal procuremen­t standards, urging government to outlaw it.

Governor El-Rufai, a Fellow of the Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors, said his administra­tion had outlawed the use of BEME for all constructi­on projects in the state, describing the document as counterpro­ductive.

He noted that the current practice in the Constructi­on Industry where Designers are also the Cost Advisers was wrong, insisting that such a practice was not transparen­t and should be stopped in Nigeria, if the nation truly wished to develop.

“In Kaduna State, we have since outlawed Bills of Engineerin­g Measuremen­t and Evaluation (BEME) for all our constructi­on projects. I don’t know where that document came from and we are not going to use it. The best book on Measuremen­ts all over the world was written by a Quantity Surveyor and the document used for the costing of all civil and building engineerin­g projects is called the Bills of Quantities (BOQ), so I don’t know where BEME came from,” El-Rufai said.

The governor said he was happy that more Quantity Surveyors were now joining politics and urged members of the Institute to seek elective positions so they can be relevant in the scheme of things in the country.

Speaking at the event, the President of the Institute, QS Mohammed Abba Tor said the NIQS President’s Dinner was put together to give the leaders of the Institute an opportunit­y to brainstorm and map out strategies through which Quantity Surveyors can engage with critical stakeholde­rs in the public sector, organised private sector and the general public.

He said the last 50 years of NIQS have been eventful, replete with achievemen­ts that are difficult to ignore. He said the membership strength of the Institute was now about 10,000 made up of fellows, corporate members, probatione­rs, technician­s and students.

According to him, the NIQS has signed reciprocit­y agreement the Canadian Institute of Quantity Surveyors (CIQS) as part of the current strategic reforms that the Institute is undergoing towards the growth of the Nigerian Constructi­on Industry.

Tor said with the endorsemen­t by internatio­nal QS institutio­ns across the globe,

NIQS was now at par with global standards and its members are now acceptable for employment anywhere in the world.

He listed the completion of the new NIQS Head Office Complex in Abuja, the establishm­ent of the QS Academy and the Digitisati­on of the Institute operations as some of the achievemen­ts of the NIQS.

 ??  ?? L-R: President, Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors, Mohammed Abba Tor, receiving Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai at a dinner organised for stakeholde­rs in NIQS in Abuja… recently
L-R: President, Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors, Mohammed Abba Tor, receiving Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai at a dinner organised for stakeholde­rs in NIQS in Abuja… recently

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