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Sep
09
2025

LATEST PRESS

FEDERAL MINISTRY OF WORKS ADOPTS FUNDING PRIORITIZATION FRAMEWORK ON NNPCL INHERITED TAX CREDIT PROJECTS NATIONWIDE.
-PROMOTES NIGERIA FIRST POLICY, SAYS CONTRACTS BELOW ₦20 BILLION TO BE DONE BY INDIGENOUS CONTRACTORS
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As part of strategic plans towards sustainability in project funding and execution and in pursuance of the directive of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, His Excellency, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR on strategic and systematic funding of inherited NNPCL funded projects, the Federal Ministry of Works has adopted funding prioritization framework to ensure the continued execution of road projects hitherto funded by Nigerian National Petroleum Company Ltd (NNPCL) under the Road Infrastructure Development and Refurbishment Investment Tax Credit Scheme. The Honourable Minister of Works, His Excellency, Sen. Engr. Nweze David Umahi, CON made this disclosure during his inspection visit to the ongoing dualization of the East-West Road (Section IIIA) from Eleme Junction, Port Harcourt to Onne Junction in Rivers State handled by Messrs RCC Nig Ltd dated 9th September 2025.

Speaking during his visit, the Honourable Minister stated that the Federal Ministry of Works had compiled all the NNPCL inherited Tax Credit projects for strategic priority funding, noting that the most critical projects within the national economic corridor would receive precedence in the hierarchy of prioritization. “We are inspecting projects of federal government in Rivers State, and this particular one is the dualization of Eleme Junction to Onne Port Junction by RCC. Recall that one carriageway was completed and commissioned, even though there are a few things we ordered afresh like the retaining wall and hanging drainage. For the second carriageway with some bridges and flyovers, work has started on it. Let me say that this is part of the NNPC Tax Credit that has been stopped in terms of funding by NNPC. But graciously, we have compiled all the NNPC inherited Tax Credit projects, and we presented as Ministry of Works to Mr. President. And Mr. President has graciously directed that none of such works should stop now. However, as Ministry, we are going to do prioritization of the projects and look at the most critical of these projects within the national economic corridor like this one. And we are going to put it forward for immediate funding because the President directed that none of such projects should stop now.”

He admonished contractors handling road projects under the Federal Ministry of Works to ensure speed, quality, compliance with specification and sustainability in project delivery and cautioned that the attention of the anti-graft agencies would be called to any case of violation of the regulations or terms and conditions set out under the contract of every project handled by the Federal Ministry of Works. He stated, “I have also noticed in some of the projects in Rivers State, and same with the Six Geo-Political zones, that contractors go ahead to put stone base and put binder course of asphalt, sometimes over 20 kilometres and leave the binder unprotected without putting wearing course. The binder is like a reinforcement to the road architecture. The wearing is the sealant that doesn't allow water to go beyond the surface. And so when you now put stone base, which has dust as designed, and you put binder, which is like a reinforcement, and you see that the composition of the binder asphalt has bigger stones, and it has holes, so the water penetrates. The moment it gets to the stone base, which has some dust, the road fails. It may technically look safe, but with time, it will definitely fail. And we've seen it in a number of roads we inspected. And what I've directed the Controller to do, and it's going to be nationwide, is that when you are putting binder and you have left it for more than two months, we are going to redo the certificate and remove all the binder and remove the stone base.” He directed that henceforth any project below the contract sum of ₦20 Billion would not be given to expatriate firms, and this he said is part of measures to promote the Nigeria First policy of Federal Government of Nigeria.

He commended the construction company handling the Eleme - Onne project, Reynolds Construction Company (RCC) for the quality of work so far done and for working on the project despite the fact that NNPCL has stopped funding the project, but frowned at the slow pace of work which they said was affected by the rainy season. He restated that 15th December 2025 remains the agreed deadline for the project’s completion with no extension or Variation of Price (VoP) allowed. “On this project of Eleme Junction, the quality of the work is excellent. The pace of the work is totally not acceptable. And let me make it very, very clear to the contractor that this project can never be reviewed by a kobo. Neither can there be any variation of price or any other claims.” He expressed dismay over the destructive habit of packing heavy duty vehicles on the road by drivers and warned that forthwith punitive measures would be taken against such perpetrators. “Our roads are not designed to carry these heavy trailers that are parking on the road. And the press should help us on that. When I was coming yesterday all the way from Aba to here, I saw that the trailers are taking over the entire roads, putting their waste, destroying the pavements, and so on and so forth. So I'm going to write to our dear Governors to see what they could help us to do about it, and will also complain to the Inspector General of Police. Let us see what we can do about it. Mr. President is doing everything possible to right the wrongs in terms of road construction. We are doing quality roads now that are going to last from 50 to 100 years. But it's being destroyed by ourselves.”

Earlier, the Federal Controller of Works in River State, Engr. Enwereama Tarilade (Mrs.) said the contractor handling Eleme- Onne road had completed the 15km Eket bound on the right carriageway and had moved to the left carriageway which is Port Harcourt bound for which 1km stretch had already been done on Continuously Reinforced Concrete Pavement (CRCP). 

Projects visited by the Honourable Minister include, the rehabilitation of Enugu – Port Harcourt, Abia/Rivers State, contract No: 6252 being handled by China Civil Engineering Construction Company Limited (CCECC), the upgrading of the 15km section of the East-West Road (Section 111A) from Port Harcourt (Eleme Junction) to Onne junction in Rivers State, contract No: 701 being handled by Messrs. RCC Nig. Ltd and multiple sections of the Enugu-Port Harcourt Expressway, including the sections handled by Arab Contractors and China Civil Engineering Construction Company Limited (CCECC).


Hon. Barr. Orji Uchenna Orji
Special Adviser (Media) to the Honourable Minister of Works Works

Sep
27
2023

Happy Eid-El Maulud 1  I  heartily convey my felicitations to the Muslim community  across the nation on this year's festival of  Eid-el- Maulud celebrated all over the world to mark the birth of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) held this 27th  September, 2023.   2. As you celebrate this memorable event, may the joy of the ceremony continue to strengthen our resolve to work for humanity and grant us the divine persuasion to bear the fruits of peace, honesty, generosity, self-discipline and sacrifice which are the virtues of Prophet Muhammad and the values of his teachings. At this moment of our trajectory, the power to overcome our challenges lies squarely on our will to cultivate the best leadership and followership attitudes as that will guarantee our hope in seeing the best even in difficult times.   3. The administration of our dear President, His Excellency, Sen. Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR is on a decisive calculated mission to restore the dignity of our nation and this calls for sacrifice and best attitudes by all Nigerians no matter the language, faith or class. Be assured that the predicaments of the time will soon vanish and our dear country, Nigeria will soar again in the comity of nations. This is the vision of the Renewed Hope Agenda of Mr. President.   4. As we celebrate the birth of a virtuous Prophet, may God continue to bless your endeavours with resounding success. Please accept always the assurances of the esteemed regards and best wishes of my family, the management and staff of the Federal Ministry of Works.   Sen. Engr. David Nweze Umahi, FNSE, FNATE, CON, GGCEHF Hon. Minister of Works ...

Sep
26
2023

FG, COREN Collaborate To Develop Nigerian Roads The FG and the  Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN) have both met to discuss the way forward to develop Nigerian roads, the Minister of Works, H.E Sen. (Engr.) David Nweze Umahi CON  represented the Ministry and presided over the meeting while the President and Chairman of Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN) Engr. Prof Sadiq Zubair Abubakar, FNSE led the engineering team to   the meeting, the deliberation  was held at the Ministry of Works Headquarter in Mabushi, Abuja.   The Minister in his remarks said “I want to involve COREN and the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE) in our road construction. l have gone round three regions of Nigeria, I am very dissatisfied with the supervision of these construction works. It seems that it is only in the South West that there are very capable hands and hardworking Directors and controllers, notwithstanding, will put the same template to use in all the regions”.   “We would like you to join us as COREN, there is no concrete road constructed in Ebonyi that has not lasted Seven years, our recommendation is that most of our highways are  going to be a continuous reinforced highways, this is the vision of the Ministry” he added.   Umahi further said “when growing up in engineering we use to have consultant, consultant would always know that if they compromised their certificate of practice will be withdrawn even at the ministry level, that is the kind of discipline we want to bring on our road infrastructure, there is no supervision in all our projects, like I said other than the South West. Henceforth every project is going to have one senior consultant later we can begin to have other junior ones, like surveyor, geotechnical and material engineers and other road engineers“.   He enjoined COREN to join him in the propagation for the reintroduction of Concrete pavement in Nigeria. The Minister said that no road that was built in this country had lasted more than three to four years even in the Northern part of Nigeria, he said that the roads in the South East are collapsing even while still under construction. The design in the roads are mostly built below the flood plain and the rains comes, and they are washed away, in his words, the Minister said he counted 9 locations that have collapsed.   The President of COREN in his reaction said “having listened  to you carefully COREN  and NSE  will key into these new positions that you have mentioned, the lack of supervision  you talked about, will be addressed, and we  believe that needs to change totally, we will be able to give our own contribution in that respect”.   He said “COREN   has been restructured, we now have, six Regional offices, with Lagos as a special Region, and then the  thirty six state offices with desk offices with seven departments, these  will play key roles in this supervision, we have developed  a protocol  to engage our members. l believe we are going to play a positive role when we develop modalities on how this will be worked out“.   “ln the aspect of seven professionals per project we are going to look at that and also contribute, the introduction of reinforced concrete, there is a ministerial committee with this ministry which have been working on the specification. l am the chairman of that committee with senior expert along with the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of FERMA and others in the next one month we will make the submission and  interim report to you, that should be the first point of engagement which  will expand the horizon for us to this new agenda of concrete road pavement” he said. ...

Sep
25
2023

FG in Discussion with Hitech.....Yet to Award .....Lagos -Calabar Coastal Highway. The attention of the Ministry of Works has been drawn to information reported online by nairametrics.com crediting a statement to H.E, Sen. (Engr) David Nweze Umahi the Hon. Minister of works as saying that the: “FG Awards LAGOS -CALABAR COASTAL HIGHWAY TO HITECH”.   This information is totally untrue and misleading.   The general public is to please note and be well guided and for the RECORDS. The FG has only recently opened a maiden  discussion with the Engineering company- HITECH on this project, a  second meeting is being considered to further access the the possibility of the project being handled by them.The Ministry has not awarded any such Contract nor has signed any such Contract Agreement with any company in this regard.   To this effect, media organizations are to please ensure their facts are duely authenticated with the Federal Ministry of Works before putting out incorrect information to the public.   Let's be more thorough in our journalistic activities as the Ministry appreciates as always the cordial and positive reportage of the Ministry's Policies and Programs. ...

First First First

PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT


Jul
16
2024

 


OTHER NEWS

Jan
19
2021

Roads: Our Intervention in Tertiary Institutions, Renews Students Class Attendance Enthusiasm - Fashola

Works and Housing Minister, His Excellency, Babatunde Raji  Fashola , SAN has said that the road intervention programme of the Federal Ministry of Works and Housing in tertiary institutions nationwide has boosted  Students class attendance enthusiasm

Fashola said, “Currently, there are 43 number road interventions within tertiary Institutions across Nigeria, and the Students are expressing renewed enthusiasm with regards to attending classes, because some defective roads, have been restored to good condition"

The Minister, represented by the Ag, FCT Federal Controller of Works, Engr Usman Yakubu spoke at the formal commissioning/hand over of 1.92km internal road rehabilitated by the Federal Ministry of Works and Housing in the Nigerian Law School, Bwari, FCT, Abuja.

Fashola explained that the road intervention program initiated by his Ministry was  an investment in education aimed at improving infrastructures in the education sector

"It is undebatable that quality of education w be impacted by the quality of Infrastructure and the learning environment and those who doubt it should simply listen to some of the feedbacks from students in the schools where this type of intervention had taken place " he said

"A gradual process of repairs, renewal and reconstruction in major Highways had reached the schools" he said.

Similarly, the Minister stated that eighty-five (85) people were employed during the construction of the internal road in the Bwari Law School, thereby contributing to the job creation initiatives of the government, and enjoined the school to ensure that the asset is properly used and maintained.

Explaining further, the Minister said that, twenty-nine (29) road interventions projects had been completed, seventeen (17) of them already handed over in 2020 and now additional twelve (12) are ready as critical intervention to support education, which the one at the Bwari Law School was among.

In his remarks, the Director General of the Nigerian Law School, Bwari, Professor Isa Hayatu Chiroma, represented by the Secretary to the Council, Mrs. Elizabeth Max-Uba, expressed profound appreciation and gratitude to the Federal Government for the intervention.

He commended the Federal Government and the Contractor for the quality of work done and the good supervision by the engineers in the Ministry of Works to deliver the road of high standard.

Professor Isa also appealed to the government for more of such interventions in other campuses of the law school in Kano, Yola, Enugu and Yenagoa.

Giving details about the scope of work, the Director of works in the school, Engr Sunday Bala explained that, the 1.92 kilometers road covered roads 3 and 11, the school ring road hostel A and B and the school recreational center.

He explained that culverts and drainages were also constructed in the rehabilitation work.

In their remarks, some members of the School community; Bello Babatunde, Chinedu Ukekwe and Mrs Stella Nosike, respectively, commended President Muhammadu Buhari and Minister of Works and Housing, H.E. Babatunde Raji Fashola SAN for the intervention, saying that, the reconstructed road had facilitated easy access to the various parts and buildings in the school, which according to them enhanced the working atmosphere in the school community for both the students and staff

SPEECHES

Jul
11
2018

Text Of The Special Herbert Macaulay Memorial Lecture Delivered By The Honourable Minister Of Power, Works & Housing At The University Of Nigeria, Nsukka

I am the most unlikely candidate to deliver a lecture on engineering and its contributions to national development.

I feel truly honored to be invited and I am humbled. As you all know too well, I am a legal practitioner, and went to university with subjects in the liberal arts, likely History, Literature, Economics and Religious Knowledge.

This itself was not a choice. It was, for me, a matter of necessity.  I wanted to be a professional and law was the only profession I could gain admission to study without having to contend with Mathematics.

I just did not like Mathematics and was confounded by figures and formulas in Physics and Chemistry. 

In my third year in secondary school, I was moved from the science classes to the arts and I was happy to see end of Mathematics. Or, so I thought, until Public Service beckoned.

From my days as Governor having to deal with budgets, Mathematics did not leave me as much as I thought we had parted ways.

Roads, Bridges, Waterworks, Housing projects and General Infrastructure had to be built in Lagos State if we were to come anywhere close to fulfilling electoral promises that I made and serving the people in any meaningful way.

Enter drawings, designs, calculations in bills of Engineering measurement, bills of quantities to measure costs and so much more.

Everything I thought I had parted ways with as a former student of the sciences were staring me in the face as a Governor.

I had to understand road designs, piles for bridges, housing designs, bills of quantities, dredging projects, gas pipelines to support our independent power plants, chlorine aid chemicals to treat water, visits had to be made to project sites and everywhere I entered there was an engineer of one type or the other.

TYPES OF ENGINEERING

In preparing this speech my little research further brought to fore the many ways that engineering defines our lives more than we have perhaps acknowledged.

For example, some of the diverse fields of engineering we have not paid enough attention to are:

Metallurgical Engineering which involves the research, control and development of processes used in the extraction and refining of metals.

Biomechanical and Biomedical engineering which combine the discipline of mechanical engineering with human anatomy and physiology. Resultantly, this leads to work in developing prostheses, developing movements for people with spinal injuries and refining equipment used for athletes.

Geomatic engineers collect, display and analyse data about the Earth’s surface and its gravity fields. This is crucial for developing mapping technology, delineating legal boundaries and indeed monitoring environmental changes.

Plastics engineering. At a time where there is a proliferation of plastic waste, this area of engineering can help develop technologies to manipulate and reshape plastics for recycling purposes.

Software engineering. In this age of apps, software engineers are trained in the specification, development, design and maintenance of software systems and products.

Water resource engineering. We cannot take for granted that water will always be an available resource. Indeed, there are already many examples, both at home and abroad, where the search for water has quickly escalated into conflicts. This type of engineering helps in the assessment of pollution sources, the control of flood damage and resolution of conflicts and effective management of water reserves.

As a coastal State, Lagos was threatened by flood, being 2  (TWO) meters below the sea level and again engineers around me, explaining how the drainage hydraulic systems of canals worked to prevent the State from being submerged.

It became very clear to me that engineering defines our civilization and there is no escape from it, in the way that law, orders our civilizations.

From the sub-national activities in Lagos, things have moved on to a National scale, with President Muhammadu Buhari’s decision to merge the Ministries of Power, Works and Housing into one, and my appointment as substantive Minister, with Mustapha Baba Shekuri and Suleiman Hassan Zarma as Ministers of State I and II respectively. 

I stand here today on the shoulders of giants who created this opportunity.

President Muhammadu Buhari who built this platform, and the many engineers at Lagos State level and now in the Ministry of Power, Works and Housing in Abuja, who have been my pillars of support by sharing their knowledge.

As I have said earlier, engineering defines life, and for a nation with a growing population like Nigeria that requires a massive injection of infrastructure, Engineering is going to play a very important role in our journey of development and our quest for prosperity.

One of the things I hope to achieve here is to re-focus the attention of this university and others to the need that Nigeria has today and will have for many decades to come, for well-trained Engineers who will not only build our infrastructure but will maintain them.

Given what President Buhari has committed to deliver, I do not foresee a situation where any Engineer or Technician who is enterprising will not have job to do; and I will explain.

As I said earlier, our population is growing; and the impact on our infrastructure is now manifest and it is affecting our quality of life. 

Whether it is this school, where you will see that lecture rooms are crowded, bed space for students is a challenge, sports facilities probably aging, and water supply a struggle. 

Or at the sea ports and airports that were built decades ago, or road networks that erosion have taken over, or power transformers and distributions lines that now serve multiples of the people they were initially installed for. 

You will see an opportunity for infrastructure upgrade, addition, renewal or reconstruction. Every time you see these challenges, there is inherently an opportunity for an engineer; and this is what I want us to focus on—the opportunities. 

We have done it before. In the 1970s immediately after the unfortunate Civil War, Nigeria embarked on a radical infrastructure renewal, building stadia, roads, bridges, high rise towers and so on, similar to what has unfolded in the United Arab Emirate in the last decade.

In the 1990s, there was a modest effort, which coincidentally was led by President Buhari under the aegis of the Petroleum Trust Fund, which became short-lived. 

Some of the roads that are still motorable in some parts of the country today were beneficiaries of that intervention, and it is no surprise that people in those places still look to President Buhari for hope because they know he has done it before.

Sadly, we missed this opportunity in the period of between 2007-2015 on a national scale when the price of crude oil, our biggest export, started rising until it exceeded to $100 per barrel and stayed there for a few years.

While many oil producing nations like Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Brazil, United Arab Emirates of Dubai and Abu Dhabi chose to invest in life changing infrastructure of hospitals, bridges airports, universities, skyscrapers, the managers of our own economy chose a different infrastructure. 

They called it Stomach Infrastructure.

They shared the money that could have changed our lives.

They imported $5m worth of rice almost on a daily basis and distributed it to the people who could have produced it. 

There is now judicial proceeding seeking to have some people account for how $2.2 Billion was allegedly shared for financing an election.

While the judicial proceedings will, hopefully, answer the question as to what happened, my interest is in the lost opportunity. 

Around the same period and with the same opportunity of oil proceeds, the Burj Khalifa, which is 829 meters tall and has 163 floors making it, the tallest building of all time, opened in Dubai; to announce their emergence on the world stage .

It took less than 5 years to build and it cost $1.5 Bilion, less than what was allegedly diverted for elections here. 

The opportunities that were lost are difficult to fully quantify in terms of material success and pride, employment for engineers, technicians, artisans, suppliers, and so much more. 

This is the lost opportunity that President Buhari is determined to harness through the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan, a document that I enjoin every one of us to read. 

In it, you will see a clear statement of intent, with a clear statement of actions, and you will see what each ministry is supposed to do. 

For the Ministry of Power, Works and Housing, our action points relate to Power sufficiency and infrastructure delivery, especially roads, bridges, public buildings and housing, in order to reflate the economy, create jobs, improve productivity and growth. 

So, when President Buhari talks about change, he wants us to understand that stomach infrastructure was a National Misadventure that must never happen again. 

He wants us to commit to the type of infrastructure that changes lives, and builds real things that will deliver a shared prosperity. 

When President Buhari talks about change, he wants us to remember that while billions of dollars were being mismanaged, the roads on this campus were deteriorating. Enugu-Port-Harcourt road was not motorable.

Enugu- Onitsha road was dilapidated.

Work had stopped on the Second Niger Bridge.

Work had stopped on the Zik Mausoleum, all because we chose stomach infrastructure and neglected to pay contractors and engineers. 

President Buhari wants us to understand that change is not an accidental occurrence; it is a matter of choice. Unlike before, President Buhari’s government has made a different choice.

That choice is to invest our resources in infrastructure; and in 3 years the signs are becoming manifest:-

Some Contractors are now back to university roads.

The first phase of 9 out of 37 Independent Power Projects for Federal Universities has been funded from the budget and the first Green Bonds ever launched in Africa.

Contractors are back to work on Enugu–Port Harcourt and Enugu–Onitsha; the problem of the 9th Mile Road will be finally solved with a new engineering design.

Work has resumed on the 2nd Niger Bridge, and with a Presidential Infrastructure Development Fund, work should not stop again on that project because of funding, until it is completed.

The Contractor is back to site at the site of the Zik Mausoleum, and promises to complete and hand it over before December this year.

There is a housing project being undertaken in 34 states of Nigeria including this State, where no less than one thousand people are currently employed at each site including engineers.

Power projects are being delivered to critical markets under a pilot scheme to support small businesses, using young electrical engineers deploying solar and gas plants in Ariaria Market for 37,000 shops and Sabon Gari Market for 15,000 shops.

Whenever I visited all these sites, the dominant profession was engineering. Men and women involved in design, testing, measurement, mixing of aggregate to cast concrete, Iron rods for reinforcement, installing solar panels, connecting electrical appliances like transformers, circuit breakers, and many more in order to deliver life changing infrastructure.

When we talk about how difficult things became in our country, it is a conversation about the opportunities we probably did not give to our Engineers.

President Buhari is determined to change that.

If you are still looking for evidence of his commitment to change; I will share some more examples with you.

The first is a series of difficult projects that seem to have defied solutions and to which the Buhari Government directed its change agenda.

One of them is the massive commitment to developing a National Standard gauge rail network to ease transportation.

The first of these, the Lagos–Ibadan-Kano line has commenced with thousands of men and women working on the sites.

There is also the Bodo – Bonny highway and bridges to connect Bodo to the Island of Bonny in Rivers state.

You might be interested to learn that this project was conceived in the late 1970s and two different contracts to deliver it were not executed.

The project has now been awarded and the contractor is on site, employing engineers and other professionals to deliver life-changing infrastructure in the Niger Delta.

One of the things that will happen is that the dangerous crossing across the creek and Atlantic Ocean from Bodo to Bonny and back and its consequential cost and time to the people of the area will be replaced by a drive across the bridge over the water bodies. 

Of course, some of you might have heard of the Mambilla Hydro power plant. To put it mildly in scope and cost it is gargantuan.

It will easily contend as the largest single power plant in Africa, with its 3,050 megawatt size and its $5.7 Billion cost.

It will involve building massive dams, casting millions of tons of concrete, deploying millions of tons of cement, iron rods, mobilising equipment, transporting them, housing workers, feeding them and developing an ecosystem of productivity in Taraba State, that will challenge all of our logistic capacities.

It will take at least 5 years to build; during which time $5.7 Billion, about N2.1 Trillion, will be expended. It is an Engineer’s dreams come true.

What is significant about it is that it was conceived since about 1972, and while many talked about it, the Buhari Government choose to act. That is change.

After many years, the Federal Executive Council of Nigeria, the highest Executive decision making body created by our constitution has approved it. The Engineering procurement and construction contract has been signed.

What is left is to raise the funding to finance it.

Instead of bemoaning the lost opportunity of many squandered billions of dollars, this project was one of the top items on President Buhari’s agenda when he visited China in 2016.

The Minister for Finance is leading our negotiation team to raise the finance.

Apart from the power that it will deliver, the construction jobs it will create, the mining employment for rocks, sand, and other building materials, the road network, the resettlement construction, and other benefits, it will unlock the agricultural promise of Taraba and surrounding states in a most defining way for our National prosperity.

But the commitment does not end at project development; it is backed by Executive action such as the President’s Executive Order No 5 that seeks to promote and secure local content by ensuring that the jobs that can be done by Nigerians must be reserved for them.

This must be good and welcome news for Nigerian professionals, especially those involved in Engineering and Construction business.

On our housing sites, there are similar directives that all the materials to used be made in Nigeria, unless they are items that we are unable to produce.

But Mr. President has not stopped there. In order to ensure that yesterday’s lost opportunities are not replicated, he is now deploying some of the recovered proceeds towards rebuilding our infrastructure.

In the Works Sector, he has just approved the release of N120 Billion towards funding 37 roads in the 2018 budget.

This is indisputable evidence of his commitment to hand Nigeria back to the people and make our money work for us.

Ladies and Gentlemen, the list of what is changing in our country for the better is long. The promise of hope and a better tomorrow are bigger than the problem that Nigeria faces today.

What remains is a matter of choice for us to choose what we want.

We will have to choose between real infrastructure and infrastructure of the stomach.

The Faculty of Engineering in the University of Nigeria and other Universities, and the Engineering students have to make, a choice; about which type of infrastructure provides security for their future.

It is, for me, truly commendable for the University of Nigeria to have inaugurated such a prestigious platform as this Herbert Macaulay Memorial Lecture, to propagate the nationalist and developmental ideals of one of the Giants of our country.

What we then do after the lecture becomes more defining than what we say.

The Economic Recovery and Growth Plan and the commitment to infrastructure renewal and development indicate clearly, where this Government’s priorities lie.

In order to make our manpower development and production respond to our National needs, I contend that the University of Nigeria must see the enormous opportunities and need for Engineers if we are to successfully deliver these projects I have listed and many more still to come.

The best way to respond and contribute to national development is to commit to producing high quality Engineering graduates, and stimulate a high Engineering undergraduate intake.

The future for jobs is promising.

Engineers will be needed not just to build Mambilla Power, the Rail projects, the Bridges, the Airports, the Seaports, and the Gas pipelines, the Power Substations and other projects, but more importantly to operate and maintain them in order to keep them running.

It is this handshake, between Government programmes and policies on one hand, and career development and manpower building by the Universities on the other hand that will take us quicker and faster towards the kind of Nigeria, that men like Herbert Macaulay in whose name we gather, dreamt of, lived for, fought for and died for.

For the construction to take place there must be a conducive work environment, where opportunities can birth Jobs, drive productivity and create prosperity; there must be peace.

Peace of a kind that requires little if any of the law enforcement capacity of the state; and a type of peace that is driven by brotherhood and peaceful coexistence.

All of us must seek that kind of peace in our enlightened common interest.

I seriously think that the best that security agents can do is to prevent conflict from being violent, to enforce the law and impose order.

It us, you and I, who hold the keys to peace

I thank Professor Benjamin C Ozumba, the Vice-Chancellor, the University of Nigeria, the faculty Board of Engineering for inviting me, and I thank you for listening.

Babatunde Raji Fashola, SAN
Honourable Minister of Power, Works and Housing

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Jun
02
2025

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PHOTO NEWS

Apr
28
2025

MID -TERM REVIEW MEETING ON THE IMPLIMENTATION OF THE DECISIONS REACHED AT THE 29TH NATIONAL COUNCIL ON WORKS (NCW) DAY 1

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