Skip to main content

Nigerian government completes US$796.71mn 32-road restoration project

The Nigerian government has completed a project costing US$796.71 million (NGN 126bn) to restore 32 roads covering a combined 2,000kms. The federal government will also upgrade nine railway stations across the country on public private partnerships (PPPs). Mike Onolememen, the Minister of Works in Nigeria, is reported by African media to have told the recent 2013 Ministerial Platform in Abuja, Nigeria that the extensive improvements meant that the country’s roads can no longer be described as “death traps”.
June 5, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
The Nigerian government has completed a project costing US$796.71 million (NGN 126bn) to restore 32 roads covering a combined 2,000kms. The federal government will also upgrade nine railway stations across the country on public private partnerships (PPPs).

Mike Onolememen, the Minister of Works in Nigeria, is reported by African media to have told the recent 2013 Ministerial Platform in Abuja, Nigeria that the extensive improvements meant that the country’s roads can no longer be described as “death traps”.

The 32 completed roads projects are reportedly in addition to 16 being handled by the Road Sector Development Team (RSDT).

Notable among the completed and ongoing road projects are reported to be the 3rd Mainland Bridge (Phase 11), covering additional works for the replacement of eight expansion joints in Lagos State; completion of the duplication of Onitsha- Owerri Road (Section 1) and Onitsha Eastern By-pass in Anambra State; and the rehabilitation of the access road to the Kaduna Refinery in Kaduna State.

Related Content

  • Planning works start for a second Niger Bridge
    August 17, 2012
    The Federal Government of Nigeria gave the go-ahead for work to start on the planning and design of a new Niger bridge. The country’s leaders have approved a US$2 million (Nigerian Naira N325 million) “transactional advisory services” contract to assess how to design and build, finance and operate a “Second Niger Bridge.” Contractor Roughton International Limited has been given 16 months to come back with a detailed schedule of how to progress.
  • Nigerian road works planned
    March 1, 2021
    A series of Nigerian road projects is being planned.
  • Lagos shortlists for Fourth Mainland Bridge
    December 12, 2022
    A consortium led by Mota-Engil is one of three shortlisted for the Nigerian project.
  • Chinese contractor wins major Nigerian road project
    November 11, 2013
    A road construction contract worth US$1.07 billion has been awarded to China Railway Construction in Nigeria. The Ministry of Delta Affairs of Nigeria awarded the package of works for Section V of the A121 East-West highway to China Civil Engineering Construction, a division of China Railway Construction. The work is expected to take five years to complete and includes design as well as construction. When it is complete, the A121 will connect Nigeria’s two main North-South highways. Its route runs from the