Business Day (Nigeria)

Fashola seeks N10trn bond to rebuild Nigeria’s infrastruc­ture

- OWEDE AGBAJILEKE, Abuja

The immediate past Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Bab a tun de Fashola has called for floating aN 10 trillion infrastruc­ture bond.

This, he said, would serve as alternativ­e source of infrastruc­ture finance in Nigeria and take care of the nation’s infrastruc­ture issues and deficit going forward.

He lamented that the nation lacked the much needed funds to fix the alarming infrastruc­ture deficit currently bedevillin­g the country.

Fashola, a former governor of Lagos State, and ex Minister of works, stated this on Monday at his ministeria­l screening in Abuja, while fielding questions

from lawmakers.

Fashola is the thirty-second Ministeria­l nominee to be screened by the Senate.

The nominee, however, pointed out that the infrastruc­ture bond should have legal backing from the National Assembly and guaranteed by the Federal Government.

“I propose that we should consider something like a N10 trillion infrastruc­ture bond backed by parliament­ary support and secured by the Federal Government with a reasonable coupon, and issued in tranches each year, as we need to fund infrastruc­ture,” he said.

In April this year, the Federal Government had disclosed that a minimum of $3 trillion investment would be needed if the country is to bridge the infrastruc­ture gap in the next three decades.

The Director General of the Bureau of Public Enterprise­s (BPE), Alex Okoh, had said the country would require an average of $100 billion per annum for the next 30 years to meet the target.

Fashola noted with regret that several attempts by the Federal Government to tackle the challenge through borrowing had failed to achieve the desired results as the loans accessible to the country was a far cry to address the menace.

He also said that attempts by the past government­s to address the deplorable state of some of the nation’s highway through the Public-privatePar­tnership (PPP) arrangemen­t ended up in a disaster as the concession­aires failed to meet the stringent conditions contained in the law.

Fashola said budgetary allocation­s to infrastruc­ture, especially highway constructi­on over the years have made mockery of the nation’s attempts to achieve meaningful progress.

He explained that the Federal Government has been finding it extremely difficult to fund the projects due to poor fund releases, a situation he said, was forcing the contractor­s to abandon their various sites.

He said: “I think there is some opportunit­y and one of the ways I think is for Nigeria to leverage from the large pool of fund with the ordinary people looking for secured investment. And some of them are not even in the banking sector keeping their cash. And I propose that we should consider something like a N10 trillion infrastruc­ture bond backed by parliament­ary support and secured by the Federal Government with a reasonable coupon issued in tranches each year, as we need to fund infrastruc­ture.

“And broken up into even very small denominati­ons that people can invest as much as only N1,000. Those who want to invest in billions can do so. And in my view, if we don’t try this, we wouldn’t know whether it has worked. But I am convinced that we can do something along this line based in the interest that I saw in the SUKUK that was oversubscr­ibed, which meant that there was an appetite for it.”

The ministeria­l nominee therefore suggested three fundamenta­l strategies to save the country from experienci­ng a total infrastruc­ture collapse.

He suggested the prioritisa­tion of the major highways that are crucial to most Nigerians and raising an infrastruc­tural bond to fix them. He also suggested the suspension of the award of new road contracts for at least two years to enable the government to adequately fund the critical ones that are nearing completion.

The former governor also urged senators to look at the most important major highways that are very critical to the socio-economic developmen­t of their area and jointly agree to present them as their priorities for the purpose of budgetary allocation.

He noted that Nigeria currently lacked enough money to execute road projects, hence its decision to prioritise its projects.

He listed roads facing funding constraint­s to include the Eleme-port Harcourt Road, Lagos-ibadan Express Road, Bodo-bonny Bridge, Yenagoa-koloOtuoke Road among others.

On the use of PPP to fund road projects, he explained that private investors are more interested in airports and hospital projects where they are able to make quick returns.

“PPPS are complex. They take time to negotiate. Even here in the Federal Government, we need to go through the ICRC to advertise. In a government that has four years to show results and in a country where there is high expectatio­ns for results, we must be more skilful on how we use them.

“Let me also say that PPPS are not attractive for all projects. I have learned to distinguis­h between social projects like roads and commercial projects like airports, hospitals where there is a daily cash count. And those are easier for private investors to want to put their money into than roads and the risk of constructi­on that it requires.”

“And there are so many modules. To use policies like the Nigerian Tax Credit Initiative Policy which we are now using to build the ApapaOworo­nshoki Expressway which Lafarge has also used to build a factory in Calabar. And a couple of others are showing interest. And I think at a time I left, there were about 28 roads on the shortlist for the committee set up to review and hopefully approve for implementa­tion,” he said.

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