Tag: Coastal Highway

  • Coastal highway: No damage to completed section – Umahi insists

    Coastal highway: No damage to completed section – Umahi insists

    There is no damage to any of the completed works on Section 1 of the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, the Minister of Works, Sen. Dave Umahi, said on Thursday.

    Umahi gave the assurance during an inspection of the Section 2 of the highway project.

    He said there was need to emphasise that there was no damage to the section to avoid misleading of the public by those pushing out falsehood on social media.

    “There is no damage to the completed section. What you can have is this massive sand filling that we are doing, and then the stone base.

    “Until it is covered, the rain is permitted to do whatever it wants to do. In all, it does help us technically.

    ”We have two and half kilometres that we are tackling,” he said.

    Umahi said that the sand filling would be completed in the next 40 days.

    “When we have done all this work, and then we cover it, and then we put pavement, nobody will understand what has happened.”

    According to him, in some places, there are over 20 feet of sand filling and in some others, there are over 26 feet.

    The minister commended the contractor handling the project, Hitech Construction Company Ltd., for quality and speed of work.

    “Hitech is capable of doing one kilometer of the coastal highway per day.

    “We are not afraid about the timing. We gave them 36 months.

  • FG to flag off Cross River section of coastal highway April 14

    FG to flag off Cross River section of coastal highway April 14

    The Federal Government is set to flag off construction of the Cross River  and Akwa Ibom section of the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway.

    The section is known as Section B3 of the coastal highway project.

    The Minister of Works, Sen. Dave Umahi, made the disclosure at a stakeholders engagement on Section  Two of the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway project in Lagos on Sunday.

    “We are going there, to Cross River, on 14, to flag off the construction. By 15, we also go to Akwa Ibom to flag off.

    “That 65km is the worst terrain. It is 65km times two, which is 130km,” he said.

    On the second legacy project, Sokoto-Badagry Highway, the minister noted that one section in Sokoto was 120km.

    “The third section of Sokoto-Badagry is going to start from Badagry but we have a few challenges.

    “We have rivers of three kilometres to cross. That is a lot of money.

    “We have proposed four options, which I am going to be discussing with Mr President, and whichever option he chooses, that is what we are going to choose.”

    Umahi gave the assurance that procurement regarding the project would start as soon as the discussions would be over, after which work would start.

  • Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway: Demolition for first 3km begins Saturday

    Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway: Demolition for first 3km begins Saturday

    The Federal Government says demolition of structures within the first three kilometers of Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway will begin on Saturday, April 27.

    The Federal Controller of Works, Lagos, Mrs Korede Keisha, disclosed this at a news conference on Thursday in Lagos.

    She said that structures to be demolished would be those within the designated right of way for the project.

    She urged property owners who received demolition notices and have concerns to visit the secretariat of the Federal Ministry of Works, from today, Thursday, April 25, until tomorrow Friday, April 26, to discuss their concerns.

    Keisha said, “So this press briefing is just to create awareness for all those that may be involved or have one or two things to do along that project corridor.

    “We’ve sent out demolition notices to as many as are within the right of way and we are using this medium now to say that everyone that has any concern within that corridor and have been served, the secretariat is opened to them from today, 3.00 pm.

    “We are welcoming them from today till tomorrow. Whatever you have to do along that axis, and then we’ve come to you and marked you down for demolition, we are asking that you see us at the secretariat from today till tomorrow evening.

    “Thereafter, demolition squad will move to action by Saturday morning for the first three kilometres.

    “For the first three kilometres, anything within the right of way of the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway will be dropped down from Saturday morning.

    “So, I want to use this medium to reach out to as many as we cannot put calls across to, that this will go a long way to let them know that their issues will be sorted out between today and tomorrow.

    “Especially if you are within zero to three kilometres of the projects and you have been marked. You have been identified as standing in the right of way of the project corridors.”

    The 700km Lagos-Calabar coastal highway project is designed to connect Lagos to Cross River, passing through the coastal states of Ogun, Ondo, Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers, and Akwa Ibom, before culminating in Cross River.

    The 700 km Lagos-Calabar coastal road will be constructed at N15 trillion, and a kilometre of the road will cost N4 billion.

  • FG to compensate property owners along Lagos-Calabar coastal highway route

    FG to compensate property owners along Lagos-Calabar coastal highway route

    The Minister of Works, Sen. Dave Umahi, has assured property owners along the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway route that a fair and transparent compensation will be paid to those affected.

    Umahi said this at a press briefing/stakeholders meeting on Lagos-Coastal Highway projects, at Eko Hotel, on Thursday in Lagos.

    The minister said that the compensation process, which would be based on government-approved rates, would ensure payment of a standard, non-negotiable amount.

    “By next week Wednesday, we will know how much compensation will be paid, and it will be paid according to the rate gazetted by the Federal Government.

    “From Wednesday, I will appoint a committee that is going to review the remuneration to be sure that what is on paper is what is on ground.

    “So, we are going to call people as much as possible, starting from Monday, to come and know if this is your property, this is how much you are getting and so on and so forth,’’ he said.

    Umahi said that a one-on-one engagement process would take place over 30 days to verify property ownership and claims.

    “So, we will try to fast track it because the one-to- one engagement is going to be for 30 days, and I said that you will all be paid within the 30 days; the moment you are verified and you sign, you are going to get your money in 30 days,” he said.

    The minister pledged his commitment to upholding the Nigerian constitution, which guarantees fair compensation.

    He said, “I swore to uphold the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and that constitution has not changed; so whatever the constitution says in terms of rate is what we have to pay.’’

    The interstate highway is proposed to traverse about nine states along the coastal shoreline of the country.

    The 750km highway, handled by Hitech Construction Africa Ltd., will start from Lagos and terminate in Cross River, with a spur to the north central part of Nigeria.

  • Lagos-Calabar coastal highway to cost N4bn per km, not N8bn – Umahi

    Lagos-Calabar coastal highway to cost N4bn per km, not N8bn – Umahi

    Minister of Works, David Umahi has disclosed that the Lagos-Calabar coastal highway will be constructed by the government at N4 billion per kilometer and not N8 billion per km as claimed by former Vice President Atiku Abubakar.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Umahi made the disclosure when when he featured as a guest on the Television Continental News Hour programme on Wednesday in Lagos State.

    From the disclosure of the Minister of Works, it, therefore, means that the entire Lagos-Calabar coastal highway project will be finished at a total cost of N2.8 trillion.

    “People are just building castles without knowledge and they don’t know figures, I will run the figures for you. We are going to compare the cross-section of the one the former vice president mentioned that was renegotiated for $11.1bn for 700 km.

    “So you have to now ask what was there to be constructed. And what was there to be constructed is the only available design from NDDC. They had designed the entire 700 km but we are not following exactly that pattern or right of way. We have a different modification. The original design had two carriageways on each side of the road with four lanes.

    “And in the middle, they did not provide for the train track. It’s just going to be a water-collecting basin. But the coastal road we are constructing has a total of 10 lanes, you know, not only that it has a total of 10 lanes, it also have what we called shoulders.

    “And the total shoulders can be put at about 23 metres. So when you put the total concrete pavement we are doing, it’s about 59 metres. When you put the total flexible pavement that he quoted it’s about 23 metres.

    “And so when you run the figures, you now find out that under his calculation, it is giving you about over N19bn per kilometre. Now if you divide it by the 23 kilometres that they are doing, it is about 2.225 times a standard superhighway carriageway, which is N11.55bn.

    “Whereas what we are doing, if you divide it, you get N5.167bn, So when you now divide using our 1.067, you get about N4bn/km. If you go back to what he has quoted, you will get over N8bn. So using concrete, which should be more expensive because of the kind of terrain we have, and using flexible pavement, which shouldn’t stand the coastal route, you will find out that our cost is N4bn instead of the N8bn claimed by the former vice president,” Umahi said.

    Recall that Atiku had questioned the decision of the President Bola Tinubu administration to allegedly award the contract to Gilbert Chagoury’s Hitech without competitive bidding, daring the president to disclose the full cost of the Lagos-Calabar highway project.

    The former Vice President also wondered why the Tinubu administration released N1.06tn for the pilot phase, or six per cent of the project, which begins at Eko Atlantic and is expected to terminate at the Lekki Deep Sea Port.

    On the mode of the construction process, the former Ebonyi governor explained that the administration never envisaged the project under a Private Public Partnership (PPP) arrangement but under an Engineering, Procurement, Construction and Finance programme as currently used on the Abuja- Markurdi road project.

    “This administration never envisaged the project under Private Public Partnership. It has always been under engineering, procurement, construction and finance. And so under this kind of arrangement, as you have on the Abuja to Makurdi road project, the federal government is required to pay a certain amount for counterpart funding.

    “And so in this particular project of Abuja to Makurdi, which is being handled by China Harbour, the government is paying 50 per cent counterpart funding. Then you have also from Makurdi to 9th Mile in Enugu state, where we are also paying 50 per cent counterpart funding.

    “So, there’s a marked difference between PPP and EPC plus F. And in this particular project, there will be a negotiated counterpart funding of between 15 and 30 per cent

    “When I was a governor, I had the African Development Bank fund a project through counterpart funding and I used some of the money to build some sections of the road.

    “So part of what we are constructing under sections one, two and three currently funded by the federal government will fall under the percentage counterpartfunding. When we finalise the negotiation, it will be between 15 per cent and 30 per cent,” he said.

    However, findings have shown that the statement of Umahi on PPP is contrary to claims made by the Minister on September 23, 2023, when he unveiled the design plan for the project.

    Speaking to journalists, the minister also said Hitech Construction would fund the project under the Public-Private Partnership model.

    Umahi said, “Let me announce that this project is under PPP. The Hitech group are going to look for the money. They have already found the money and that is the good news because we don’t waste our time talking and holding meetings and wasting resources.”

    “We are engaging seriously because we have seen the financial capacity and capability of Hitech and this project is going to be delivered in phases. Any section that we complete, we will toll it and then business and transportation will start.”

    Continuing, the works minister said the constructing company was only invited by the ministry based on their pedigree to construct the roads, adding that there was no public bidding process for the project.

    “We followed all procurement acts and the act permits the Federal Ministry of Works to invite a company that has specialised skill in a particular work. For instance, we have some problems on the Third Mainland Bridge with some underwater works and whom did we invite?

    “We invited Julius Berger because they have the skill to the exclusive rights of theirs and we submitted a bid for it and we negotiated and awarded the job. Of course, we ran through the Bureau of Public Procurement and of course also to the Federal Executive Council. So it followed due process,” Umahi concluded.