Skip to main content

Contractor states key Nigerian bridge project on schedule

The consortium building Nigeria’s key Second Niger River Crossing, close to the city of Onitsha, says that the bridge will be ready for traffic on time, according to the contract requirements. The consortium is headed by German owned contractor Julius Berger Nigeria and the PPP package has been set out as a 25 year concession contract. The project is costing close to US$700 million to construct and includes the bridge itself as well as associated road and rail connections as the structure is being designed
May 1, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
RSSThe consortium building Nigeria’s key Second Niger River Crossing, close to the city of Onitsha, says that the bridge will be ready for traffic on time, according to the contract requirements. The consortium is headed by German owned contractor 7740 Julius Berger Nigeria and the PPP package has been set out as a 25 year concession contract. The project is costing close to US$700 million to construct and includes the bridge itself as well as associated road and rail connections as the structure is being designed with multiple traffic lanes for vehicles as well as train tracks.

The new bridge has been has been required for some years as the First Niger River Crossing suffers heavy congestion and is no longer able to cope with traffic demands, as well as having a somewhat unusual history. The first bridge was constructed in 1965 at a cost of around $8.5 million but was then blown up in the 1967-1970 Biafran War, only being rebuilt after hostilities ceased. Concerns have been expressed as to the structural integrity of the first bridge and its long term future given its troubled past. The new structure has been planned for around 20 years, with the foundation Stone having been laid by Olusegun Obasanjo, Nigeria’s then president, in 2007. The new bridge is required to ease traffic delays in the South East of Nigeria, between Delta State and Anambra State. Onitsha is a thriving commercial city and is all a centre for transport and trade in the area.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Nigeria’s new Niger River crossing construction underway
    August 14, 2014
    Preparation work for the access roads to Nigeria’s new Niger River crossing has now commenced. Construction of the bridge itself looks likely to commence in 2015 and this long delayed project has been the subject of much scrutiny and comment within Nigeria. Contractor Julius Berger has the concession for the US$700 million bridge, which will carry both road and rail links. The site of the new bridge is close to the commercial city of Onitsha, which is a major transport hub for Nigeria. High volumes of throu
  • Hinergia bridge project finds federal funding
    March 27, 2017
    A budget worth nearly US$252 million will help pay for bridge design and construction work as well as bridge repair activities in 12 states across Nigeria. The budget has been approved by Nigeria’s Federal Executive Council (FEC). Meanwhile $475 million is being budgeted for the engineering and consultancy work required for the Second Niger Bridge that will connect the city of Asaba in Delta State with Onitsha in Anambra State. The new bridge is desperately required as the existing structure is in poor cond
  • 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
  • New dual carriageway for South East Nigeria
    March 11, 2015
    Work is nearing completion on Nigeria’s important East-West road project. The new dual carriageway link should be ready to carry traffic in a matter of months. In all the project was originally expected to cost in the order of US$1.93 billion to construct and work commenced back in 2006. However an additional stretch may now be added that will extend the route. This project is of significance as it improves transport links to the South East of Nigeria, an area of the country that has long been overlooked fo