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FG to audit all PPP projects, enforce insurance of assets – ICRC

By NAN
18 September 2024   |   6:42 pm
        The Federal Government, through the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission(ICRC), is an audit of all Public Private Partnership(PPP) projects to ascertain their performance. READ ALSO:FG to issue PPP compliance certificates in seven days — ICRC   This is contained in a statement signed by Mr. Ifeanyi Nwoko, Acting Head of Media and…
The-Infrastructure-Concession-Regulatory-Commission-ICRC

 

 

 

 

The Federal Government, through the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission(ICRC), is an audit of all Public Private Partnership(PPP) projects to ascertain their performance.

READ ALSO:FG to issue PPP compliance certificates in seven days — ICRC

 

This is contained in a statement signed by Mr. Ifeanyi Nwoko, Acting Head of Media and Publicity, ICRC on Wednesday in Abuja.

 

Dr Jobson Ewalefoh Director-General, ICRC, made this known when he paid a courtesy visit to the Minister of Interior, Mr. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo.

 

Ewalefoh said the federal government will also ensure that all the projects are insured as statutorily stipulated in the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission Establishment Act, 2005.

 

He told the minister that the commission was already working on evaluating the performance of all PPP projects as well as enforcing their insurance.

 

The commission , he said, will train PPP desk officers in Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs) as it was already in the works.

 

He urged the ministry not to relent in bringing projects to the commission or seek clarifications.

 

“Talking about the audit, we are already putting in place a mechanism to start auditing the performance of PPP agreements that we have signed in the past.

 

“We do not want to condemn or terminate them, but we want to optimize them.

READ ALSO:ICRC registers 71,000 missing persons across Africa

 

“When it comes to the issue of insurance, of course, it is a matter of law for all national assets, both hard and soft infrastructure, that are concessioner through PPP to be insured.

 

“That is one area we are going to look into very soon. We are going to issue a policy that all assets under PPP must, in compliance with the law, be insured,” he said.

 

The director general who thanked the minister for being at the forefront of utilizing PPP in delivering key infrastructure needs, pointed out that his choice of the ministry for his first official visit was in view of his performance.

 

The ICRC D-G said that in the past year  of the current administration, the minister had taken the highest number of PPP projects to the Federal Executive Council (FEC) for approval.

 

He commended him for not moving to cancel any PPP but rather optimizing those that were stalling.

 

“My people just did a sum of the total amount of investment that has come into this ministry in your time as minister in the last one year and it is over five hundred million dollars.

 

“ So, we cannot thank you enough as a champion of PPP”.

READ ALSO:Ministry lauds Ogun Inland Dry Port project on ICRC’s certification

 

“Therefore, we felt it was in our interest to come and say thank you for being our PPP Ambassador and a PPP Champion.

 

“We are using this opportunity to tell the world that the government of President Bola Tinubu has respect for the sanctity of contracts and to tell investors that their investment is safe,” he said.

 

Earlier in his remark, the minister commended the appointment of Ewalefoh as the D-G of ICRC.

 

Tunji-Ojo described the appointment as a clear demonstration of the intention of the government to diversify the economy and allow the private sector to play its role.

 

The minister added that his qualifications and experience were unquestionable.

 

He disclosed plans to efficiently leverage PPPs to make key agencies in the ministry self-reliant and exit them from the government’s budget line.

 

“We believe that a lot of our agencies should be off budget and we are working towards that, because the resources to the government are not even there.

 

“This is a country of 230 million people with an increasing population, therefore we have to be innovative in terms of financing.

 

“We know that the resources of the government are limited but the private sector has a lot more resources.

 

“All we need is to create the environment and give them the confidence to invest and Nigeria will be a better place for us,” he said.

READ ALSO:Sudan: International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) facilitates release of 64 detainees

 

Tunji-Oji said that the ministry had leveraged on the huge resources of the private sector saying everything we have done in the ministry  today are majorly PPPs.

 

“We  can not  ask the government for millions of dollars

 

“ See the data center, we have the e-gate, as we speak, we have the Advanced Passenger Information System, the Gap Management System is almost completed, and a lot of other PPPs are in the pipeline,” he said.

 

The minister stressed that PPPs were not only about leveraging on funds but also leveraging on expertise for enhanced productivity and enhanced efficiency.

 

He assured the D-G that the ministry would continue to collaborate with the ICRC, adding that the commission had always made key technical inputs to the ministry’s projects and fine-tuned them for better operability.

 

Tunji-Ojo charged the commission to remain steadfast in their role in pushing Nigeria to take its rightful place.

READ ALSO:CSOs indict 175 MDAs of spurning FOI requests, laud ICRC, others

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