• Wednesday, April 24, 2024
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Ibom Seaport to attract $2.5bn investment

Import tariff to rise as Customs adjusts exchange rate to N1, 356.883/$

The Ibom Seaport in Akwa Ibom State is expected to attract $2.5 billion investment when completed.

To be executed under the Public Private Partnership (PPP) between the Federal Government and a group of investors, and contract for the project, which on completion would help in decongesting Lagos ports, would be awarded in April this year.

Chidi Izumah, acting director-general, Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC), stated this during a high-level stakeholders retreat on PPP held in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital.

“Ibom Deep Seaport is a PPP project that is going to bring $2.5 billion of investment and change the landscape of infrastructure in the country.

“It will have solutions to traffic congestion in Lagos port because those goods that normally go to Lagos will come here; this has been done in partnership with ICRC.

READ ALSO: Two firms win bid for Ibom deep seaport project

“I can assure you before April, the contract for Ibom Deep Seaport will be signed and the approved consortium will start immediately. The President is committed to developing infrastructure, without infrastructure, we cannot have inclusive growth and development.

“The stakeholders conference is to redefine our strategies and create investment to develop infrastructure across all parts of Nigeria,” Izuwah said.

In her remarks, Imeh Okon, senior special assistant to the President on infrastructure, said the Federal Government had invested about N2.7 trillion in the development of infrastructure in the last three years.

According to Okon, some of the dividends include the N100 billion that has been injected into rail project.

She said the Federal Government was committed to the development of infrastructure in the country, adding that infrastructural development enhances growth.

The presidential aide, however, said that revenue generation was a major challenge since the country depended on oil as its main source of revenue and the price of oil was not stable.
“So we are going to partner with the private sector to develop most of our priority infrastructure projects.”

In his opening remarks, Gabriel Aduda, the Permanent Secretary, Political and Economic Affairs, office of the Secretary to the Federal Government said that the retreat was for the improvement of infrastructure and its delivery in the country.

Aduda hoped that the retreat would galvanise and look at the legal framework and operational framework to ensure sustainable infrastructure programme in the country.