So that’s how I went to Idu Station yesterday to see the new Automated Fare Collection system at work. Told that 85% of tickets bought for the 7am to KD were bought online. People are abandoning their initial skepticism and starting to trust the system more. Here’s what’s changed
Anyone familiar with rail travel between Kaduna and Abuja in the last few years is fully aware of just how stressful getting tickets can be. People showing up several hours ahead and not even sure they’ll get a ticket. A whole industry of touting arose to fill the gap. Naturally.
In Dec 2020, NRC finally launched its Automated Fare Collection (AFC) System, for the Abuja-Kaduna Line. The contract (I’ve talked about this in a previous thread) covers among other things Speedstiles, Validators and Ticket Vending machines at all the Stations. Rollout ongoing.
A couple of things to note:

You either buy on web or download an App (Android / iPhone)

You have to create a profile to log-in. So all tickets linked to profiles

For now you can only buy a day in advance - i.e. tickets for today or tomorrow. Will eventually expand that window
Here’s what happens when you have an invalid ticket ie a used or expired ticket. Also if you buy a ticket to Station 3, get on train and then travel past Station 3 and come off at Station 5, the system will not allow you to exit the station. You’ll have to pay penalty fare.
Ben interesting to see Nigerians quietly abandon their initial cynicism about the system. I’m told in the early days, people would buy online and still show up hours early LOL. Even though the system allocates Seats at ticket purchase stage. That Naija wariness in full force 😀
Now that people are realizing that once you book a ticket online the seat you were allocated is guaranteed for you, they’re adjusting. Swooping into the Station a few minutes ahead of departure lol. Same people that used to queue hours ahead. Convenience is sweet abeg.
It’s still work in progress of course. The ticket vending machines have yet to be installed, coming soon. (At the Stations you can also buy the e-tickets at the counter). Also some Stations still have civil works going on - modifying the layout to fit in the speedstiles etc.
Because Idu Station is big, they could afford to have different sets of speedstiles for entry and for exit (photos - Entry on left, Exit on right). Smaller stations use bi-directional speedstiles ie the same speedstiles for both entry and exit. To maximize available space.
The company delivering this solution is a wholly Naija company - @TPSsolution. Building on PMB’s Executive Order 5 (Promotion of local content). The parent company @secureidltd manufactures the bulk of the bank cards (Visa, MasterCard, etc) in use in Nigeria. Also SIM cards.
One of the major items of investments in this Automated Fare Collection project is Internet connections (Fibre + VSAT). You basically have these stations in the middle of nowhere that you have to arrange reliable internet for, with multiple backup, for it to function seamlessly.
The entire project is a @NigeriaGov concession. The FGN/NRC did not put any money down for the project. Concessionaire wholly funding it, deploying it, and will operate, maintain and support for a 10 year concession period, and earn a portion of revenues as fees.
Note that this AFC project has completely destroyed (without shame or apologies) a thriving touting-economy on that rail route. Imagine the ‘Job’ losses etc. Heard of someone who put a person on monthly pay just to be able to help secure tickets, pre-automation.

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More from @toluogunlesi

29 Jan
Opportunity Alert: @NigeriaGov’s Highway Development and Management Initiative (HDMI). Pay attention.

HDMI is a new program that has (in Phase 1) identified 10 Federal highways (= ~2,225 km) for private sector investment and participation.

According to @tundefashola:

#Thread Image
The 10 Federal highways in Phase 1 of the HDMI Image
The basic idea is to get the private sector to develop and manage key federal roads, as a way out of the funding limitations that have historically existed.
Read 11 tweets
26 Jan
Fulani man born in Abeokuta 47 years ago (to a father who moved there 80 years ago);speaks more fluent Yoruba than a lot of Yoruba people I know. These migration stories are far more common than we acknowledge; these are the narratives & reality we don’t highlight enough.
#Thread
Nnamdi Azikiwe was born in Zungeru, in today’s Niger State. As was Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, 29 years after Zik. Bola Ige’s memoir is titled Kaduna Boy for a reason. Their parents traveled far from ‘home’, in search of better lives, or simply pursuing business interests.
No, this is not a call to gloss over the very real ethnic and religious differences that exist, and the justifiable grievances that many hold, either inherited, or from personal experience. But those are not the only narratives that exist, or that should be actively promoted.
Read 9 tweets
23 Jan
PMB has cancelled the Secure Anchorage Area (SAA) contract. An arrangement established by the previous Administration, in which vessels berthing in Nigeria paid money to a private company for security inside a ‘Secure Anchorage Area’ within Nigerian Ports. thisdaylive.com/index.php/2021…
“We felt that it wasn’t necessary for people to be paying money to secure their vessels on waters. It is the responsibility of @NigeriaGov through @NigerianNavy & @nimasaofficial to secure at zero cost to the owners.” — @hadizabalausman, MD, @nigerianports thecable.ng/hadiza-bala-us…
“Just between January and July (2020), OMSL received $17 million in revenue for securing vessels and none of those revenues went to the coffers of the federal government.” — @hadizabalausman
Read 4 tweets
23 Jan
There’s a recurring misunderstanding/misinterpretation of public procurement numbers/costs, that does no one any good. If there’s going to be a debate let it at least be based on facts/reality not conjecture, not knee-jerk responses.

Another #thread 🙃
A few days ago I complained about a bad piece by @GuardianNigeria, in which they were busied themselves dividing distance by cost and then proceeding to make wild comparisons between rail projects. While also getting cost wrong in some cases.
The nuances of procurement, whether public or private sector, can hardly be accurately conveyed in your typical news headline, especially when headlines are driven mostly by virality ambitions. Always good to try and understand full picture before jumping to conclusions.
Read 10 tweets
23 Jan
More questions than answers here:

Story says man first flew from Lagos to Atlanta. Then from Detroit to Toronto.

Is that typical? Was there a scheduled stopover in Detroit, between Atlanta & Toronto?

Or was it 2 separate flights: Atlanta-Detroit & then Detroit-Toronto?

(1/2)
Canada requires a negative Covid-test - so how did he board a flight from the US to Canada without a test?

Note that the US did not require a negative test for inbound travelers (except from the U.K.) at the time he flew. Can that explain anything?

Questions questions

(2/2)
So I’ve just seen this: confirmation that Delta has an Atlanta to Toronto flight via Detroit. Highly probable it’s the route the man flew (as opposed to two separate flights)
Read 5 tweets
22 Jan
Some information about the just-launched E-ticketing platform for the Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC)

#Thread
The contract is for the “Design, Development, Deployment and Management” of a “Secure Automated Fare Collection System” for the NRC.

According to @icrcng and @MinTransportNG, it’s a 10-year Public Private Partnership (PPP) contract, funded by the contractor, @secureidltd
“This is a PPP where the private sector will invest money to develop, deploy and operate an integrated ticketing solution.” — DG @icrcng on the day he presented the Full Business Case (FBC) Certificate for the concession of the E-ticketing system to @ChibuikeAmaechi, Sept 2019.
Read 12 tweets

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