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FG To Complete Six Water Labs, 2012
The Federal Ministry of Water Resources plans to complete water laboratories across the country in the second quarter of 2012, a top official of the ministry has said.
Mr Obioha Agada, the acting Director, Water Quality and Sanitation Department, disclosed this in an interview with newsmen last Tuesday in Abuja.
Agada said: “We have gone ahead with the construction of six laboratories and they are at various stages of completion.
“We have paid the 15 per cent advance payment and the work is going on now; we hope that before the next one year, the construction of the laboratories would have been completed.
“They are all recent developments even the approval took place sometime in March. We started a little late this year; we didn’t start at the beginning of the year.
“The scope of work is supposed to be 12 calendar months, taking from the time they started. We are hopeful that by March, April next year, we would have completed the construction work.”
He said that the laboratories located in Port Harcourt, Aba, Warri, Maiduguri, Sokoto and Markurdi respectively, were aimed at testing the quality of underground and surface water.
“After we finish the second phase which will be completed by next year, we will have 12 laboratories in the country.
“Then we will take another batch of six again; we are trying to see if every state can have a laboratory so that people can test water nearby.
“The laboratories will be of world standard. They will be too expensive for the Federal Government to manage alone so we want to commercialise them,’’ he said.
He explained that the ministry had planned to complete the project in the first quarter of this year but the procurement process took time.
He said that it had to pass through advertisement, evaluation and presentation to the Tenders’ Board before the contract was awarded.
The acting Director told newsmen that the services of the six functional laboratories located in Lagos, Akure, Kano, Gombe, Enugu and Niger States, had helped to reduce water-borne diseases in those areas.