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Nigeria Infrastructure Report Q4 2009

Published by: Business Monitor International

Published: Sep. 10, 2009 - 68 Pages


Table of Contents


Executive Summary
Market Overview
Nigeria
Global Overview
Governments To The Rescue: The Global Surge In Infrastructure Spending
Table: Infrastructure Stimulus Plans List
SWOT Analysis
Nigeria Infrastructure Industry SWOT
Nigeria Political SWOT
Nigeria Economic SWOT
Nigeria Business Environment SWOT
Major Infrastructure Developments and Key Projects
Transport Infrastructure Overview
New And Ongoing Projects
Airports
Railways
Ports
Road Networks
Table: Nigeria - Major Transport Infrastructure Projects
Energy And Utilities Infrastructure Overview
Table: List of IPPs in Nigeria
New and Ongoing Projects
Power Plants And Transmission Grids
Oil And Gas Pipelines
Water
Nigeria - Major Energy And Utilities Infrastructure Projects
Construction Overview
New and Ongoing Projects
Residential Construction
Table: Nigeria - Major Construction Projects
Industry Forecast Scenario
Table: Construction And Industry Data
Business Environment
Africa Infrastructure Business Environment Ratings
Table: Regional Infrastructure Business Environment Ratings
Limits Of Potential Returns
Risks To Realisation Of Potential Returns
Project Finance Ratings: Outlook For Africa
Table: Design And Construction Rating
Table: Commissioning And Operating Rating
Table: Overall Project Finance Rating
Foreign Direct Investment
Labour Force
Legal Framework
Tax Regime
Macroeconomic Outlook
Table: Nigeria - Economic Activity
Political Outlook
Company Monitor
Julius Berger Nigeria Plc.
Sentraco Nigeria Limited

Abstract

We have revised upwards our forecasts this quarter on the back the sustained bounce in the price of oiland better than expected gross fixed capital formation and real investment growth figures. Nigeria’sgovernment revenues - and the economy as a whole - remain highly dependent on the price of oil(Nigeria’s key export). West Texas Intermediate (WTI) was trading at US$68/bbl at the time of writing(August 2009), considerably higher than the level of US$37/bbl witnessed in December 2008, at thebottom of the commodity correction.

The improving health of government finances is only one side of the infrastructure story in Nigeria.Efforts to foster the development of public private partnerships (PPPs) as a means to finance and developcritical infrastructure were bolstered in July 2009 with the creation of the Project Steering Committee toaudit and support the work of the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission, which was createdin November 2008. However, the unpredictable, complex and nebulous legal and regulatory systemgoverning PPPs and prevalent corruption are deep structural problems that will continue to deterinvestors.

In this context, we now forecast Nigeria’s construction industry to contract by 5.2% in real terms in 2009,compared with our earlier forecast of -10.8%. We envisage largely flat sector growth in 2010. We donote, however, that although the economic story was the stronger factor this quarter and propelled theupward revision of our forecasts, the slow progress in addressing structural weaknesses in the PPP marketwill pose a long-term downside risk to our forecasts.

In spite of the hurdles, Nigeria’s attractiveness for foreign companies was highlighted when in May 2009General Electric (GE) and the government of Nigeria finalised an agreement pertaining to collaborationin Nigeria's infrastructure sector. One aspect where collaboration was agreed was in the rail sector, whereGE could supply new locomotives and be responsible for signalling.

The sector where GE's business in Nigeria could witness the strongest growth, however, is in the field ofenergy, power and water infrastructure. Certainly one of the sectors to watch is mid-stream energy. Withthe West African Gas Pipeline finally operating and the Trans-Sahara pipeline in the works, Nigeria willfeature some of the largest mid-stream energy infrastructure facilities globally. The sector is poised forfurther growth.

Nigeria sits in mid-table in our Project Finance Ratings, with a placing of fifth out of nine Africancountries. Nigeria scores reasonably solidly in the Commissioning and Operating phase relative to otherAfrican countries, in large part owing to strong inputs for the Energy and Utilities variable. However, thecountry is let down by its performance in Design and Construction phase, owing to a poor regulatoryenvironment and a poor score for inputs.

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