FG partners COREN  on road durability, development 

The Federal Government and the Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN)  have expressed their readiness to develop Nigerian roads.

A statement issued in Abuja on Tuesday by the Director of Information,  Federal Ministry of Works,  Mrs Blessing Lere-Adams, quoted the Minister of Works,  Engr.  David Nweze Umahi,  speaking when he played host to the Chairman of Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN) Engr.  Sadiq Zubair Abubakar,  who visited him at the ministry headquarters in Abuja.

He said:  “I want to involve COREN  and the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE)  in our road construction.  l have gone around three regions of Nigeria, I am very dissatisfied with the supervision of these construction works. It seems that it is only in the South West that there are very capable hands and hard-working Directors and controllers, notwithstanding, will put the same template to use in all the regions.

“We would like you to join us as COREN, there is no concrete road constructed in Ebonyi that has not lasted Seven years, we recommend that most of our highways are going to be continuously reinforced highways, this is the vision of the Ministry.”

Umahi further said, “When growing up in engineering we used to have consultants, the consultant would always know that if they compromised their certificates of practice would be withdrawn even at the ministry level, that is the kind of discipline we want to bring on our road infrastructure, there is no supervision in all our projects, like I  said other than the South West.

“Henceforth every project is going to have one senior consultant later we can begin to have other junior ones, like surveyors, geotechnical and material engineers, and other  road engineers.“

He enjoined COREN to join him in the propagation of the reintroduction of Concrete pavement in Nigeria.

The Minister,  who said no road that was built in this country had lasted more than three to four years even in the Northern part of Nigeria, said the roads in the South East are collapsing even while still under construction.

“The design in the roads are mostly built below the flood plain and the rains come, and they are washed away, in his words, the Minister said he counted 9 locations that have collapsed.

The President of COREN in his reaction said: “Having listened to you carefully, COREN  and NSE  will key into these new positions that you have mentioned, the lack of supervision you talked about, will be addressed, and we believe that needs to change totally, we will be able to give our contribution in that respect.”

He  said: “COREN has been restructured, we now have, six Regional offices, with Lagos as a special Region, and then the thirty-six state offices with desk offices with seven departments, these  will play key roles in this supervision, we have developed a protocol  to engage our members,  l believe we are going to play a positive role when we develop modalities on how this will be worked out.

“ln the aspect of seven professionals per project we are going to look at that and also contribute, to the introduction of reinforced concrete, there is a ministerial committee with this ministry which has been working on the specification, l am the chairman  of that committee with senior expert along with the  Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of FERMA and others  in the next one month we will make the submission and an interim report to you, that should be the first point of engagement which  will expand the horizon for us to this new agenda of concrete road pavement.”