The Nigerian Society of Engineers and FIDIC Africa are set to collaborate on a comprehensive training initiative aimed at equipping engineers with the expertise required for the successful delivery of mega infrastructure projects.
FIDIC Africa is the African regional body of the International Federation of Consulting Engineers. It represents consulting engineering associations across Africa and promotes collaboration, infrastructure development, professional standards, and engineering best practices on the continent.
The initiative formed the crux of discussions when the President of the NSE, Ali Rabiu, received the President of FIDIC Africa, George Okoroma, during an interaction session held at the National Engineering Centre headquarters in Abuja, according to a statement.
The proposed training programme is expected to provide engineers with critical knowledge on the processes involved in bidding for and executing multi-billion-dollar infrastructure projects undertaken by governments and private sector organisations.
The capacity-building effort will also expose participants to international standards in project delivery, contract administration, and engineering consultancy practice.
According to the discussions, the training will be designed to position engineers with the requisite technical and professional competence needed to compete effectively for large-scale contracts and execute such projects successfully upon award.
Both organisations also expressed a shared commitment to the development of young engineers through early exposure to complex and high-capacity engineering projects, with a view to preparing the next generation of professionals for leadership in infrastructure development. In addition, the two engineering bodies agreed on modalities to strengthen engineering consultancy practice in Nigeria and across Africa.
Arinze Nwafor is a journalist at Punch Newspapers with five years of experience reporting on Nigeria’s economy, industry, data, metro, and judiciary. He focuses on highlighting growth, policy, and market challenges shaping Africa’s largest economy. Arinze’s reporting reflects practical newsroom experience, editorial judgment, and a strong commitment to accurate, informative, and audience-focused journalism.
All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from PUNCH.
Contact: [email protected]
