Tuesday 15 October 2013

World Bank to assist Nigeria on power, infrastructure with $1.4m —Okonjo-Iweala


"All this good news must become a reality and not just promises. Nigerians have endured too long for un-interrupted power supply and it is every citizens right. And what will $1.4m cover, a new transformer?"

World Bank to assist Nigeria on power, infrastructure with $1.4m —Okonjo-Iweala


The World Bank has pledged to support Nigeria’s  power sector and infrastructure development with about 1.4 million dollars, the Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala announced  in Washington
The minister  said  this  when she  briefed  newsmen on Nigeria’s  delegation meeting with the bank at the Annual meeting of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF).
She said the World Bank was planning to set up a global infrastructure facility and Nigeria would be among the first countries to benefit considering its population and infrastructure needs.
“The World Bank Group, that is the World Bank and the International Finance Corporation (IFC), through the World Bank president has made  it  known that they want Nigeria to be one of the focus countries in sub- Saharan Africa.
“This means that they are willing to work with Nigeria to invest hundreds of millions of dollars.
“They have a lending programme of about a billion dollars a year but they are willing to use that and pull in more resources from the U.S. through the Power Africa Initiative, using the offices of IFC,  to help us address infrastructure problems.
“They want to concentrate on power, and they are already actively working with several private companies that want to work in Nigeria.
“They are also promising to give us another  700 million dollars guarantees from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development for the power sector as well as expressing willingness to invest 700 million dollars in the transmission sector,’’ she said.
She added that the meeting also discussed  on how to improve the bank’s social safety network programme in Nigeria .
Okonjo-Iweala said  that the bank and the  Federal Government would collaborate on a 400 million-dollar social safety net programme which would key into the existing  programmes already running in the country.
The programmes, she said, include, saving one million lives; instant cash transfers, improving nutrition for children, immunisation, HIV/Aids and anti- malaria programmes, among others.
She said the programme under conditional cash transfer would be used to scale up the project on cash transfer in education in Kano state to improve the number of out-of-school children, especially the girls.
According to Okonjo-Iweala, Nigeria also got pledges from  the bank to help improve statistics.
The minister reiterated that the  2013 budget was on course describing some speculations on the budget in the media as false.
“We have spoken to the National Assembly on the amendments and they have done something and we have decided to continue  with the implementation.
“Please, 2013 budget is being implemented, what is being perpetrated by some sections of the press, that somehow the 2013 budget has fallen apart and not implemented, is false.
“This budget is being implemented, it still has some issues here and there but we’ve decided to go ahead to find a solution and take care of the missing money to pay people involved under the SURE-P programme”, she said.

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