News

2nd Niger Bridge Now At 91% Completion, FG Claims

Published

on

The Federal Government, yesterday, said the Second Niger Bridge was now at 91percent completion.
This is as the Federal Government has claimed that the sit-at-home in the South-East has affected the pace of work at the 2nd Niger Bridge.
The bridge was billed for completion on February but was delayed due to the COVID-19 lockdown and #EndSARS protests.
Featuring at the Special Weekly Briefing coordinated by the Presidential Communications Team at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, the Minister of Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, said that the Second Niger Bridge was one of the cardinal projects of the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration.
The briefing was to enable him provide further updates on key collaborations between the federal and the state governments in the implementation of some of the major reforms being executed by the ministry and the Presidential Infrastructure Development Fund (PIDF).
The minister said that 1,486 people have been directly employed for the Second Niger Bridge while another 8,110 indirect jobs have been created.
He puts the cost of three major PIDF projects at N1.3trillion.
The projects are Abuja-Kaduna-Zaria-Kano Expressway (375km): N797billion, Second Niger Bridge (11.59km): N206billion and Lagos-Ibadan Expressway (127km): N310billion.
On when the projects would be completed, Fashola said that Lagos-Ibadan Express Way and Second Niger Bridge are on course to be completed this year 2022, while the main carriageway of Abuja-Kaduna-Zaria-Kano expressway is scheduled for completion by Q2 2023, adding that ancillary works would be completed later.
However, the minister has warned motorists to shelve the temptation to exceed 100km/h on completed roads, to avoid crashes.
He said the warning became necessary when he got messages from some of the road users commending the quality of work done, who said they were doing 150 100km/h due to the smoothness of the roads.
He also decried the sale of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) and other petroleum products on the roads, saying they deteriorate the roads faster.

Trending

Exit mobile version