Engineers demand urgent overhaul of urban transport

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By Angela Atabo

The Nigerian Institution of Civil Engineers (NICE) has urged sweeping reforms in urban mass transport, warning rapid urbanisation is outpacing infrastructure and policy delivery.

The call was made on Sunday at the 6th U.G. Jibrin Distinguished Annual Public Lecture in Abuja, with the theme โ€˜Urban Mass Transportation: An Urgent Agendaโ€™.

Guest speaker, Mr Nebolisa Emordi, said Nigeriaโ€™s urban population has exceeded 100 million, with nearly 70 per cent projected to live in cities by 2050.

He said the surge demanded urgent, deliberate action to modernise transport through strategic planning, regulation and technology-driven solutions.

Emordi noted the system was heavily road-dependent, accounting for about 80 per cent of passenger and freight movement, yet remained poorly regulated and fragmented.

โ€œSo the urban mass transportation system must urgently evolve through deliberate planning, prioritisation, analysis and enforcement of regulations,โ€ he said.

He added โ€œit requires strategic technology-driven transformation and collaborative indigenous effortsโ€ to tackle congestion and meet national transport policy goals.

โ€œIt will also promote public-private partnerships and create sustainable infrastructure such as bus lanes, transit stations and CNG-powered buses.

โ€œClassically, urban mass transportation adopts integrated multimodal systems incorporating road, rail, air and water modes,โ€ Emordi said.

He observed informal transport, including motorcycles and private cars, accounted for over half of urban transit, exposing gaps in formal infrastructure.

Emordi advocated city-specific transport master plans backed by data, private sector participation and smart technologies like GPS tracking and unified ticketing.

NICE Chairman, Mr Tokunbo Ajanaku, said the lecture honoured Umar Jibrin and reflected a pressing national need for efficient urban mobility.

โ€œEverything in Nigeria depends on efficient urban transportation, yet challenges have not been critically defined.

โ€œAs engineers, we must advance positions that crystallise into policies and projects driving efficient urban transport infrastructure,โ€ Ajanaku added.

President of the Nigerian Society of Engineers, Mr Ali Rabiu, said traffic congestion wastes productive hours and hampers economic growth.

Represented by Mr Valery Agberagba, his deputy, he said: โ€œUrban mass transit is a call to action that must receive serious national attention.

โ€œWe have started many initiatives but regressed. This is not acceptable.โ€

The Emir of Nasarawa, Alhaji Ibrahim Jibrin, cited policy inconsistency as a major setback to transport development.

He urged government continuity and called on engineers to advocate consistent policies to ensure projects are completed and sustained.

Umar Jibrin, a former Executive Secretary of the Federal Capital Development Authority, said Abujaโ€™s master plan already provided a solid transport framework but suffered from weak implementation.

โ€œThe only missing link is implementing the master plan, including completing road networks to support intra- and inter-district transport,โ€ he said. (NAN) (www.nannews.ng)

 

Edited by Kamal Tayo Oropo

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