By Teddy Nwanunobi
Abuja (Sundiata Post) – Nigeria, on Wednesday, during its Federal Executive Council (FEC), approved and awarded the contract for the construction of the $39.9 million border link bridge with neighbours, Cameroon.
The Council, which was presided over by the Acting President, Yemi Osinbajo, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, also approved a Revised National Policy on Environment for the country.
Briefing State House correspondents of the meeting’s outcome in the company of the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, said that the Council approved the memorandum for the construction of Cameroon-Nigeria Border link bridge, at Ikot Efiom under the African Development Bank support.
The project, he said, was meant to improve the relationship between Cameroon and Nigeria post the International Court of Justice’s judgement over Bakassi.
He explained that the approved bridge was part of the link road between Enugu-Abakiliki Way which is already completed and part of larger Lagos-Mumbasa Highway.
“$38 million is for the construction contract and $1.9 million for the consultancy and this was done under ADB procurement guidelines,” he said.
Fashola also said the council approved the resuscitation and completion of the Kaduna Eastern Bypass highway, which was started in 2002 and was initially planned to have been completed within three years.
He said the road was a 50-kilometre highway and dual carriage way with nine bridges over rivers and rail crossings.
“The project which was first awarded in 2002 was N16 billion. We have had to get approval for N22 billion verbatim and so that takes that project cost now to N32 billion
.
“The contractor was paid N5.5 billion in 2002. If we had paid the contractor N11 billion then when exchange rate was N109, it would have fetched us $96 million. If you multiply $96 million today even at official rate of N305, it is now N29 billion,” he explained.
Also speaking, the outgoing Minister of Environment, Amina Mohammed, explained that the policy on environment which was first formulated in 1991 was first revised in 1999.
Mohammed stressed that the new policy framework was important because of the need to capture some of the emerging issues that developed since the last revision.
She listed some of the issues to include climate change, coastal erosion, desertification, erosion, pollution and insecurity.
“What the policy does is to look at all the different inter-sectoral issues that we have whether it is with water, health, power agriculture and bring them in to have a multi-sectoral response.
“It went into an extensive stakeholder consultation, a greater part of the new policy environment sees partnership with the private sector and with the communities as absolutely essential to the sustainability of our environment,” she explained.
She added that the new policy provided better opportunity to engage with states, local governments and communities and executing the priorities of the change agenda.