The federal government has stated that the reconstruction
of the Lagos-Ibadan expressway is to be completed in 2021 and that work on the
road is not expected to stop until it is ready.
It also announced that $650 million has been set
aside to complete the road and four others, including Abuja-Kaduna-Kano, the
last section of East-West Road, Mambila Plateau and the Second Niger Bridge.
The Federal Controller of Works in Lagos,
Adedammola Kuti, stated this on Wednesday at the opening of a section of the road
that was shut for reconstruction to ease movement during the festive period.
Kuti said the infrastructure fund of the federal
government was growing and that if he had his figures right, “it must have risen
to about $1 billion but I know that it is not less than $650 million.”
The 127.6 kilometre Lagos-Ibadan expressway
reconstruction and expansion was started by the President Goodluck Jonathan
administration in July 2013 and the cost of the total works was put at N167
billion in 48 months by two contractors, Messrs Julius Berger Plc and Reynolds
Construction Company (RCC) Limited.
The reconstruction and expansion works did not go
as planned because of inadequate funding but this has been resolved with the
setting aside of $600 million by the President Muhammadu Buhari administration,
according to Kuti.
He said the road ought to have been completed in
2017 but that because of additional work, “we now have to take into
consideration the construction of under-passes, flyovers and even toll plazas, and
with additional works, you expect the completion date to also shift; we are
moving it forward to 2021 but the work is not going to stop like we experienced
in the past which was due to poor funding. Right now, this federal government
has set aside enough funds for the completion of this job.”
The project, he added, was ongoing and that the
federal government was committed to completing it, and had set aside huge sum
of money that it would benefit from massively.
“So, we don’t expect any slowdown of activities
outside weather and that is why we want to make the best use of this dry season
to finish our work. The public should exercise patience with us; the road is a
priority road for the federal government of Nigeria.”
He said the rate of work on the Lagos-Ibadan expressway
had increased significantly since the introduction of the Infrastructural Fund.
“Completion percentage has also risen; initially, we were getting close to 60
per cent, but now, with the introduction of new works, the percentage dropped,
that is the way it is calculated.”
The Controller of Works also inspected the
Ikorodu-Sagamu road being expanded to four lanes from its single lane
structure.
The road, which reconstruction started in April this
year, is being done by Arab Contractors, and they are working in sections for
strategic reasons, Kuti added.
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