How Lagos-calabar Highway Compares With Pan-african Cairo-cape Town Route - Travel
How Lagos-Calabar Highway compares with Pan-African Cairo-Cape town route
Controversy deepens as Lagos-Calabar Highway Costs 7 times more per km than Pan-African Cairo-Cape town route
Nigeria’s
Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, a 700 km project estimated at $11–13
billion (₦15.6 trillion), is sparking outrage as its per-kilometer cost
of $15.7–17.9 million dwarfs the $1.65 billion budget for the 10,228 km
Cairo-Cape Town Highway—Africa’s longest road, stretching across 10
nations at just $156,000/km.
Critics, including former Vice
President Atiku Abubakar in 2024, label the disparity a “highway to
fraud,” noting the Nigerian project’s cost nearly matches the combined
2024 budgets of all 36 Nigerian states (₦15.91 trillion).
The
Lagos-Calabar Highway is far more expensive per kilometer than the
Cairo–Cape Town Highway, though the latter’s total cost is unclear due
to its fragmented development. The Nigerian project’s high cost, opaque
contracting, and environmental risks have drawn criticism, while the
transcontinental highway’s costs are distributed across nations and
decades.
Key Cost Comparisons
Per-Kilometer Cost:
Lagos-Calabar:
$15.7–17.9 million/km (₦4 billion/km), according to Nigeria’s Works
Minister David Umahi, who defended the figure by comparing it to
inherited projects like the Eleme-Onne Road (₦5.2 billion/km).
Cairo-Cape
Town: $156,000/km for the Ethiopian section (170 km), funded by the
African Development Bank and built by Egypt’s Arab Contractors. Even if
the total $3 billion estimate for the full route is used, the average
cost remains below $300,000/km.
Funding Models:
Nigeria’s
project relies on a Public-Private Partnership (PPP), with Hitech
Construction financing 70% and the government covering 30%. Critics
question the lack of competitive bidding and ties between Hitech and
President Tinubu’s allies.
The Cairo-Cape Town Highway is
piecemeal-funded by multilateral institutions (e.g., AfDB) and national
budgets, leveraging existing roads to reduce costs.
Economic Justifications:
Nigerian
officials say the Lagos-Calabar Highway will boost GDP by $45 billion
in five years and create jobs, but opponents argue the cost is untenable
amid economic crises.
The transcontinental highway prioritises
regional trade and tourism, with projected gains from streamlined
cross-border logistics.
Controversies and Challenges
Nigeria:
The Lagos-Calabar project faces backlash over environmental damage
(wetlands/mangroves), forced demolitions, and allegations of inflated
costs.
Cairo-Cape Town: Delays persist due to political tensions
(e.g., Ethiopia-Egypt disputes over Nile water rights) and uneven
funding across nations.
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