Nigeria's High Speed Railway Project Is 'world-class' - KMPG - Transportation - dhabworld
Nigeria’s
high speed rail project initiated by President Goodluck Jonathan has
been rated among the global top 100 world-class infrastructure projects
by KPMG.
The rail will connect Lagos, Kano, Kaduna, Warri,
Bauchi, Abuja, and Port Harcourt and will cost the country $13 billion,
much of which will be financed with a loan from the Export Import Bank
of China.
The China Railway Construction Corporation has secured
the contract to build the 3,218-kilometre network, which will be
digitally operated using fibre-optic cables, radio communication and
wireless services.
The project is designed to cover 54 stations and will take 25 years to build.

In the report, The Infrastructure 100: World Markets Report,
the KPMG panel of judges said the project “will remove heavy freight
from Nigeria’s stressed roads, could save the country millions on road
maintenance”.
Other African projects on the list are: Khi Solar
One (South Africa), Square Kilometer Array (South Africa), PRASA Rolling
Stock (South Africa), Kudu Gas Field and CCGT Project
(Namibia),Trans-Saharan Natural Gas Project (Nigeria to Algeria),
Mombasa-Kigali Railway (Rwanda), KivuWatt (Rwanda), Jinja Bridge
(Uganda), and Jomo Kenyatta International Airport Terminal (Kenya).
In its note, KPMG said the report highlights key trends driving infrastructure investment around the world.
A
global panel of industry experts identifies 100 of the world’s most
innovative, impactful infrastructure projects showing how governments
are coming together with the private sector to overcome funding
constraints to finance and build projects that can improve quality of
life – both solving immediate needs and planning for future societal
demands.
The report looks at infrastructure based on the dynamics
of four key markets: Mature International Markets (like Canada,
Australia, and UK), Economic Powerhouses (including the US and BRIC
countries), Smaller Established Markets (like Chile, Sweden, New
Zealand, Korea and South Africa), and Emerging Markets (including a
number of economies in Africa).
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