Arbitration & ADR, Insights

Regulation of Building Projects in Nigeria – Inadequate or Unenforced? A Case Study of Lagos State

The recent collapse of a 21-story building on Gerard Road, Ikoyi area of Lagos State and the consequent loss of precious lives in that debacle has once again brought to fore the persisting unresolved issues plaguing the built environment sector in Nigeria and the inadequacy of existing measures put in place to safeguard the life and property of citizens.

Over the past two decades, the number of collapsed buildings in Lagos State alone has risen to worrisome levels and this once again raises the question of whether Nigeria is behind in enacting adequate laws to regulate this crucial sector or whether adequacy is not the problem but rather that the laws are more honored in their breach than in their observance.

Despite Nigeria’s huge housing deficit, and the need to encourage foreign direct investment into the built environment sector, investors and citizens continue to encounter various challenges in obtaining building permits from regulators. A four-year assessment of business regulations by World Bank around the 36 Nigerian States and FCT Abuja in four regulatory areas including dealing with construction permits, discloses Kaduna, Enugu, Abia, Lagos and Anambra as States showing the largest advancement toward the global good practice frontier…

 

 

To read the full article, kindly download the PDF

Aderemi Ogunbanjo

Partner

Oluchi Nwaizim

Senior Associate

Practice Key Contacts

More To Read

07/10/2024
Implementation Framework and Potential Implications of the Domestic Crude Supply Obligations (“DCS0”)

INTRODUCTION While reiterating commitment to the development of the domestic crude oil market driven by willing buyer-willing seller arrangements, the Petroleum Industry Act 2021 (“PIA”)

18/09/2024
The Zhongshan Fucheng Industrial Investment Co. Ltd. V. Federal Republic of Nigeria Arbitral Award – Analysis of the Issues

The arbitral award issued in favour of Zhongshan Fucheng against Nigeria by a UK-seated tribunal on 26 March 2021 elicited significant public reactions only after