The
Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) has said that the relocation of tank
farms from the Apapa Port roads remained the permanent solution to the
persistent gridlock in the area.
The
Lagos Sector Commander of the commission, Mr Chidi Nkwonta, said that the
measures being taken at the moment to end the congestion were temporary.
Nkwonta
said that the increase in the number of tankers and trucks, the dilapidated
condition of the roads, and the negligence of the stakeholders in the oil and
gas industry made it necessary for the tank farms to be relocated.
He
said: “We expect the tank farms to be moved from Apapa; they cannot be on the
port roads in Apapa; the siting of the tank farms is inappropriate. It is in
the heart of the town and it is unsafe, it is causing congestion. As such, it
is endangering the entire environment.
So,
the tank farms must move at the long run, while the roads must be fixed. You
cannot control the traffic on those roads when the roads are so bad. The number
of vehicles on the roads is large and there is no parking space for the trucks.
Most of those trucks enter the potholes and they get stuck; some of the trucks
lack maintenance; and coupled with the existence of the potholes it is
difficult to move them.”
According
to the sector commander, lack of functional loading bays, dishonesty among
stakeholders in coordinating the movement of the tankers in and out of the
farms made drivers to resort to queuing on the access roads.
He
said they queued to avoid being pushed to the back by other loaders of
products.
Nkwonta
alleged that the company currently rehabilitating the roads had worsened the
situation by blocking parts of the roads while working in the daytime.
He
advised that the construction work could be done at night.
He
urged the construction company to fill all the potholes on the roads, as a
temporary measure, to ease the “nightmare” for the people. The sector commander
urged the government to designate a route for tankers and trucks. Nkwonta
advised the government to provide dedicated parks for the tankers and introduce
the use of tallies in order to coordinate the movement of such tankers in
batches.
He
urged the unions to put their loading bays in good shape and to ensure that all
the drivers adhered strictly to the laws guiding their operations.
The
FRSC boss said that the commission had drafted no fewer than 300 officers and
two commands to control traffic in the area in a bid to solve the problem.
Meanwhile,
Lagos State Government has disagreed with the Federal Government over the
construction of only the failed portion of the Oshodi Apapa express road saying
total reconstruction of the entire stretch of the expressway is the permanent
solution to the perennial gridlock on the road.
Speaking
in Lagos yesterday, the Lagos State Commissioner for Transportation, Kayode
Opeifa, said the temporary palliatives of the Federal Government would not
solve the problem on the busiest roads.
Opeifa
pointed out that the root cause of the chaos on the road, especially around the
Coconut bus-stop and the Apapa ports, was that several portions of the road had
failed.
The
Commissioner said the situation led to frequent accidents involving tankers and
this had resulted in the total blockage of the road in the past.
“The
problem affecting the Apapa end is that most portions of the road are bad, and
that explains why tankers and trucks fall on that road, resulting in the
traffic mess we always experienced there. Until the road is reconstructed, the
problem on the Apapa axis will be very difficult to solve permanently,” he
said.
Opeifa
said the Federal and Lagos State Governments had a meeting in 2012 where the former
promised to reconstruct the entire road, so as to end the sufferings of
motorists plying the route.
He,
however, said that the Lagos state government was still expecting the Federal
Government to fulfil the promise it made in 2012 to reconstruct the road.
“What
they are doing now is palliative work and that will not solve the problem.
“You
see, the blight spots are Coconut, Wharf and Creek sections of the road, but
the ongoing palliative work is not extended to those areas.
“We
have been consistently implementing our own part of the agreement we had with
them, some of which was to manage the traffic and build inner city roads,” he
said.
He
said the state government was constructing no fewer than eight inner city roads
and deploying traffic administrators there, to ensure sanity.
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