News
Lagos-Ibadan Rail: We Have Borrowed $2.5bn From China Exim Bank – Amaechi

The Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, has said that the Federal Government has borrowed about $2.5billion for the construction of a railway linking Lagos to Ibadan. Lagos-Ibadan Rail
He stated this during an exclusive interview on Channels Television’s Newsnight which aired on Monday night.
“If you look at the whole total cost, it will be $2.5 to $2.6 billion that we have borrowed from China Exim bank,” he said
The Minister explained that the Federal Government’s decision to extend the rail line to the nation’s seaports is for the economic benefit associated with it.
Lagos-Ibadan Rail
He added, “But at the end of the day, the project is costing about $2 billion. The government is coughing out more than just $200 million. We are bringing out about $700 million because we have to end to the seaport in Apapa which was not part of the original design.
“So we had to take about 45kilometres rail from Ebute-Metta into Apapa seaport. Everything together is about $2 billion. There is an additional one they are going to bring to connect Tincan Island Seaport to Apapa, that will be some extra cost which we have to borrow from them.
“They also lent us about $1.4 billion for the Lagos-Ibadan while the Federal Government had to cough out about $200 million to make it $1.6
billion.” Lagos-Ibadan Rail
Amaechi noted that the Federal Executive Council had approved the two basic loan facilities presented by the Ministry of Transporation.
He stated that the administration of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan had borrowed $500 million for the Kaduna-Abuja rail line.
According to him, since the inception of President Muhammadu Buhari’s government in 2015, the rail line “took us about $1 billion so we had to cough out the remaining money.”
“When we came, part of the project was abandoned for the inability of the government to produce the counterpart funding. So what the government did was to release the counterpart funding and money for the extra work we needed to do.
“We had to buy the locomotives and coaches to enable us to commence commercial activities. For the Kaduna-Abuja, they lent $500 million,” he stated further.
Credit: ChannelsTV
-
News1 week ago
Vision BMW Alpina, Lamborghini Fenomeno Roadster, Ferrari Luce, Mercedes-AMG GT 4-Door Coupé, News In May
-
News7 days ago
Liberian Senator’s Toyota Land Cruiser SUV Nearly Fell Into River After Its Tyres Slipped Off A Narrow Bridge
-
News1 week ago
Dangote’s Leopard 8 SUV, Davido’s Mercedes‑Maybach SL 680, Burna Boy’s Bugatti Chiron, All-new Nord A7 SUV, Nigerian News In May
-
News6 days ago
Volkswagen ID.4 Owners File A Lawsuit Regarding Charging Limits And Battery Recall
-
News4 days ago
Ford Recalls Several Vehicles Over Defective Ecoboost That Can Cut Power
-
News5 days ago
BYD Executive Vice President Says Brands Like Maserati Are “Very Interesting”
-
News1 week ago
‘GR Corolla On Steroids’ : Toyota Introduces All-new Track-bred 2027 GRMN Corolla
-
News3 days ago
No Casualties Reported As Mercedes-Benz G-Class Collides With A Barrier At Eko Hotel Roundabout