WorldStage — The Director-General, Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC) Dr Jobson Ewalefoh has urged West African countries to adopt Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) as a strategic mechanism for addressing the region’s infrastructure deficit.
This is contained in a statement signed by Ifeanyi Nwoko, Acting Head of Media and Publicity, ICRC, in Abuja on Sunday.
Ewalefoh made the call while speaking during a panel session at the ECOWAS Infrastructure Forum in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire.
He said governments across the region could no longer rely solely on public resources to provide critical infrastructure, such as roads, railways, housing, and water, needed to drive sustainable economic growth.
According to him, PPPs have become an essential alternative to traditional public procurement, enabling governments to collaborate with the private sector to finance, develop, operate and maintain infrastructure projects.
He said such partnerships also provide access to private sector innovation, technical expertise and efficient risk allocation.
“As infrastructure needs continue to outpace public resources, governments must create enabling environments that attract greater private sector participation through transparent regulatory frameworks and bankable projects.”
Ewalefoh said that beyond the conventional PPP procurement process initiated by governments, well-regulated unsolicited proposals from the private sector offered an additional avenue for expanding the pipeline of infrastructure projects.
He explained that unsolicited proposals allow private investors to identify viable infrastructure needs, develop projects at their own cost and assume the associated risks, thereby reducing the financial burden on governments.
The director-general however, stressed that unsolicited proposals were designed to complement rather than replace the conventional procurement process.
“An unsolicited proposal is a complementary proposal. We simply do not have enough public resources to develop every project through the solicited route.
“What we have done is to pragmatically transfer that responsibility and the associated risks of project development to the private sector,” he said.
The ICRC boss said that although unsolicited projects originate from private investors, they undergo the same rigorous appraisal process as government-sponsored PPP projects.
He said Nigeria had strengthened its PPP framework through clear eligibility criteria, structured governance procedures, the Swiss Challenge procurement method, non-refundable application fees and performance bonds.
“ This is to ensure that only credible and bankable unsolicited proposals progressed through the transaction process,” he said.
Ewalefoh also called on development partners to increase investment in project preparation, noting that while many institutions were willing to finance infrastructure projects, they were often reluctant to fund the development of bankable projects.
“If everyone agrees that Africa lacks bankable projects, then we must ask why development partners are unwilling to invest in preparing those projects.
“That is precisely the gap unsolicited proposals help to fill.”
He stressed that West Africa’s growing infrastructure needs required innovative financing solutions tailored to the region’s development realities.
Ewalefoh also advocated closer collaboration among ECOWAS member states through a regional network of national PPP institutions to strengthen technical capacity, promote knowledge sharing and harmonise best practices for project appraisal and implementation.
He said greater regional coordination would strengthen the credibility of PPP transactions by promoting common evaluation standards and enhancing information sharing on cross-border infrastructure projects and unsolicited proposals with regional implications.
Ewalefoh reaffirmed Nigeria’s commitment to strengthening the PPP ecosystem through transparent regulation, sound governance and innovative project development frameworks capable of attracting credible private investment into critical infrastructure across Nigeria and West Africa.
The panel also featured representatives from Ghana, Senegal and Côte d’Ivoire, who shared their countries’ experiences in leveraging PPPs to accelerate infrastructure development across the West African sub-region.
Participants at the session agreed that PPPs remained the most viable framework for mobilising private investment, bridging West Africa’s infrastructure gap and accelerating sustainable economic development across the region




































































