The Federal Government needs about $113 billion for the development of three critical sectors of the economy.
The amount is to be deployed in the oil and gas, power and transport sectors of the economy over a period of six years.
Director General of Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), Mr. Benjamin
Dikki revealed this in a paper presented at the Annual General Meeting
of Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) entitled, “Making Nigeria
Work: A Dialogue Between the Real Sector and the Reformer.”
Disclosed that to modernise the Nigerian transport system,
investments of about $33 billion would be required in six years for
road and rail development to undertake rehabilitation and modernisation
of the Nigerian Railway and the construction of new road networks across
the country.
He explained that in the next six years, Nigeria would require
about $18 – $20 billion of investment in the power sector, adding that
the current reforms in the sector has enabled the private sector to
invest in the rehabilitation of existing infrastructure and in new
projects.
Dikki noted that within the same period, the nation would require
about $60 billion investments in oil and gas to unleash the potentials
in the sector.
He said government was not in a position to finance all the
investment requirements, thus the private sector needs to participate
in investing in the various sectors of oil and gas, roads, railways,
inland waterways and other sectors.
“It is in order to attract these needed private sector investments
that government, through the transformation agenda, is finetuning
policies, legal and regulatory frameworks to give confidence to the
private sector to invest,” he said.
He emphasised that the enactment of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB)
and transport bills midwifed by BPE would be critical. He added that
without the passage of the bills, the country is estimated to be losing,
for example, an additional revenue of about $287 million in accruals to
government from the three production sharing contracts every month if
the PIB is not passed.
On the impact of reform and privatisation on the nation’s economy, the Director General said the
BPE has concluded reforms in eight sectors of the economy namely
telecommunications, power, banking and finance, marine, mining,
industrial, steel, oil and gas, government has also, so far, privatised
123 enterprises including the recently concluded Power Holding Company
of Nigeria (PHCN) successor companies and realised over N564.3 billion.
Dikki further noted that the reform of the telecommunications and
banking sectors remain so far the most successful in terms of their
impact on the Nigerian economy, stressing that the nation’s tele-density
has been raised from about 450,000 telephone lines in 2001 to over
134.5 million as at September 2014.
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