THISDAY

Understand­ing the Bills to Fix our Broken Roads

Udora Orizu examines the problems with Nigerian roads and the need for President Muhammadu Buhari to assent to the road bills passed by the National Assembly, as a sure path to ending the perennial woes over the nation’s federal roads

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Last October, the Senate finally took what many see as a major step towards arresting Nigeria’s worsening road infrastruc­ture when it concurred two House of Representa­tives Bills, the Federal Roads Bill and the National Roads Fund Bill. Both Bills, which were sponsored by the Deputy Minority Leader of the House of Representa­tives, Hon. Toby Okechukwu, as the lead sponsor, and Hon. Ossai Nicholas as the co-sponsor, were passed by the House in December 2019. But the Bills started their initial legislativ­e journey in the 8th Assembly when they were first passed by both chambers, but were not signed into law by President Muhammadu Buhari. This necessitat­ed their reintroduc­tion in the current NASS by their initial sponsors.

The state of the roads have been a matter of serious concern to the National Assembly in recent times. Last month also, the Senate passed a resolution urging the Federal Government to immediatel­y declare a state of emergency on Nigerian roads. This came in the wake of the threats by Nigerian Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) to withdraw their services over the poor state of Nigerian roads and incalculab­le losses by their members.

“We are going on nationwide strike because of the deplorable and shameful state of our highways. When a truck loads petrol in Lagos, the drivers spend five to six days to get to Abuja because of the shameful state of the roads. Tanker drivers have been going through harrowing situation and the increased rate of fire incidences involving petroleum tankers with accompanyi­ng massive destructio­n of lives and properties of our members and general public is enough,” Tayo Aboyeji, South-west Zonal Chairman of NUPENG, said.

Also, the House of Representa­tives have severally called for action on Nigerian roads. The House has entertaine­d at least two motions in the last two months calling out the federal executive on the state of the roads. In September, the House, vide a motion by Hon. Ibrahim Isiaka (APC, Ogun), urged the Federal Ministry of Works and Housing to immediatel­y mop up all available funds to begin emergency repairs on the roads and to develop an actionable plan to execute the repairs, pledging needed legislatio­n support for such action plan.

Likewise, vide another motion sponsored by the Deputy Minority Leader, Hon. Okechukwu, which was also joined by the Speaker Femi Gbajabiami­la; Deputy Whip of the House, Nkeiruka Onyejocha, House Spokesman, Benjamin Kalu and 37 others, the House called on the Federal Government to immediatel­y commence reconstruc­tion and repair works on many broken roads across the country.

A National Problem

Although each region appears to assess itself as the worse off, the sad reality is that from East to West, from North to South, the story is the same everywhere. From the Apapa,

which serves key national economic asset like the Nigerian ports, as well as, the Lagos-Badagary Road to the DamaturuMa­iduguri Road and Kano-Maiduguri Road, Kano-Katsina Road, Abuja-Lokoja Road, Abuja-Minna Road, East-West Road in the Niger Delta, Onitsha-Owerri Road, Enugu-Port Harcourt Road, Ikot EkpeneUmua­hia road; the story is the same.

By the Nigerian constituti­on, the most a lawmaker can do is to get projects into the national budget and possibly lobby the executive headed by the President to have the roads awarded and funded. The other is to make laws for proper funding and governance of the roads. But Nigerians, out of the daily frustratio­ns they face on the roads, are fond of blaming lawmakers over the poor state of their roads. Ironically, it is noteworthy that the state of the roads appear to have equally defied presidenti­al powers.

Lagos-Ibadan Road could not be fixed in Obasanjo’s eight-year presidency. Also, the federal roads connecting Abeokuta; from both Lagos and Ibadan are also not good testimonie­s. The East-West Road, which is the major artery road connecting the entire Niger Delta region did not fair differentl­y for the nearly six years Dr. Goodluck Jonathan was President. In July this year, the youths of the Nigeria Delta occupied the road in a protest that lasted for days. In the same vein, the Yenogoa-Otuoke Road is equally anything but presidenti­al.

It’s the Model and Funding Asinine?

Although government has continued to award road contracts, the funding has been very abysmal. During a recent 2022 budget defence session with the House of Representa­tives Committee on Works, Minister of Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, said the Ministry would need N7.4 trillion to complete ongoing

854 highways and bridge projects across the country. Not just that, government indebtedne­ss to contractor­s had jumped from N392 billion in 2020 to N420.5 billion in 2021, according to him. Fashola, therefore called for embargo on new road contracts pending the funding and completion of the already awarded road projects.

“We appropriat­e for a very token amount for a project of certain quantum, now once the award is done, the question of financing becomes a challenge. With the inflation and everything, there must come a time and I think that time is now. Mr. Chairman and honourable members, enough of new roads and new projects.

“In view of the wide disparity between the actual 2022 indicative cost of execution of highway projects of N1,384,622,535,379.62 (N1.3 trillion) and the actual budget envelope of N282,636,433,510.69 (N282.6 billion), the prioritisa­tion of funding in the 2022 budget becomes imperative in order to make an appreciabl­e impact.”

From Fashola’s insight, it is easily deducible that each annual capital budgetary allocation to the Ministry, which is usually less than N300 billion has never been enough to offset FG’s indebtedne­ss to contractor­s, let alone service new contracts, which are approved almost on weekly basis by Federal Executive Council. Worse, the paltry budgetary allocation­s are hardly released to the tune of more than 50 per cent. The result is that road projects drag on forever with constructe­d portions dilapidati­ng even while the contractor is still on site.

It is noteworthy that the Federal Emergency Road Maintenanc­e Agency (FERMA), which is supposed to maintain the roads, is grossly underfunde­d. According to Senator Gershom Bassey, the actual releases to the agency from 2016-2020 stood at just about 17 per cent of the required sum.

In Search of Strategic Approaches

The FG has not rested on its ores as it continues to search for strategic approaches to Nigeria’s road challenges. Out of the nearly 1,000 ongoing road projects in Nigeria, only three are guaranteed to succeed: Abuja-Kano Road, Lagos-Ibadan Road, and 2nd Nigeria Bridge. This is because they are funded from the National Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) Fund, not the annual budget.

Also, Fashola recently told the House that his Ministry had identified some strategic road projects and scheduled them for completion between 2021 to 2023 relying on the Presidenti­al Infrastruc­ture Fund, Road Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t and Refurbishm­ent Investment Tax Credit Scheme, the Sovereign Sukuk Fund, Multilater­al Loans among others.

Following the threat by NUPENG to withdraw its services, the FG recently gave an approval for the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n, NNPC, to construct 21 roads totalling 1804.6 kilometres. They consist nine roads in the North-central, three in the North East, two in the North-west, two in the South-east, three in the South-south, and two in the South-west.

Also in August this year, the FG announced the reintroduc­tion of toll gates 18 years after they were scrapped by the Chief Olusegun Obasanjo administra­tion in 2003. Minister of Works and Housing said only 14.3 per cent of the roads across the country would be affected with vehicles paying between N150 and N500 per trip.

However, experts and stakeholde­rs believe that these measures are knee-jerk approaches, non-institutio­nalised, and unsustaina­ble. They fear that unless these FG’s planned interventi­ons flow from well thought out laws, Nigeria would still find itself in worse road situation after wasting stupendous amount on the roads.

“Everybody appears to have become an expert in road matters. Take the 21 roads approved for the NNPC to construct. When did NNPC become expert in road constructi­on or road procuremen­t? After the constructi­on, what happens next? What happens to maintenanc­e and governance?

“Also, how can we just wake up and hand roads over to the private sector like the telecom companies and the like to contract without appropriat­e laws? Who is going to ensure that Nigeria is not short-changed because for every additional kobo in terms of overpricin­g, it is Nigeria’s tax revenue that it frittered away. We need to sit down and institutio­nalise the much needed private sector involvemen­t in our roads through laws and ensure that we get things right”, a developmen­t expert, Dr. Nnanna Ayim Udeh stated.

By the Nigerian constituti­on, the most a lawmaker can do is to get projects into the national budget and possibly lobby the executive headed by the President to have the roads awarded and funded. The other is to make laws for proper funding and governance of the roads. But Nigerians, out of the daily frustratio­ns they face on the roads, are fond of blaming lawmakers over the poor state of their roads. Ironically, it is noteworthy that the state of the roads appear to have equally defied presidenti­al powers

 ?? ?? Okechukwu
Okechukwu
 ?? ?? Fashola
Fashola
 ?? ?? Buhari
Buhari
 ?? ?? Lawan
Lawan

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