Tinubu, Dangote Task Nigerian Engineers On Professionalism, National Devt

…As President Promises Timely Completion Of All Ongoing Projects

By ABAH ADAH, Abuja

President Bola Tinubu and President of the Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote have both called for ambitious regulation and enforcement driven by fair sanctions for erring engineers in Nigeria.

In their separate speeches at their core at the 34th Engineering Assembly of the Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN) on Tuesday in Abuja, the duo stressed that Nigeria must prioritise public safety by holding engineers accountable for negligence and unethical conduct to correct all hitherto professional breaches and trespasses, and pave way for unimpeded national development.

With President Tinubu represented by the Minister of Works, Senator David Umahi, and Dangote who was the chairman of the occassion, by Dangote Group Chief Economist, Professor Hassan Mahmoud, they noted that engineering failures should no longer be treated with weak oversight or reactive regulation.

In his address, President Tinubu said Nigeria must shift from a regulatory system that reacts after disasters occur to one that prevents failures through effective oversight, enforcement and accountability.

“The responsibility before us is therefore clear. Nigeria must move from engineering regulation that is mostly reactive to engineering regulation that is preventive, data-driven, enforceable and trusted by the public,” the President said.

Tinubu described COREN as
not simply a professional register but a public safety institution, arguing that engineering regulation should primarily protect lives and national assets rather than merely administer professional registration.Politics

He said: “Regulation should not be seen as punishment. Regulation is protection. It protects the public from incompetence. It protects clients from poor delivery. It protects the government from waste. It protects good engineers from being undercut. It protects investors from failed infrastructure. Most importantly, it protects lives.”

The President said every stage of infrastructure delivery from planning and design to procurement, construction, supervision, maintenance and eventual decommissioning must be guided by competence, integrity and public safety.

Warning that engineering failures carry enormous consequences, the president said, “When engineering succeeds, society moves safely. When engineering fails, lives are lost, investments are wasted, public confidence is damaged, and national development is delayed. Therefore, public safety must remain the first principle of engineering practice.”

He argued that effective regulation cannot exist without enforcement, while enforcement without appropriate penalties would fail to deter misconduct.

“Engineering is the backbone of national development. But engineering without regulation is risky. Regulation without enforcement is weak. Enforcement without sanction is ineffective. Sanctions without fairness are unjust.

“Therefore, what Nigeria needs is a balanced system, strong regulation, fair enforcement and proportionate sanctions,”Tinubu noted.

According to the president, his administration’s unprecedented approach to sustainable infrastructure development for the country also reflects in the assurance that roads being executed under the current administration are designed to last between 50 and 100 years.

He promised to ensure that all ongoing projects are completed under his tenure as president. “My minister has listed a number of projects that we are doing across the nation and I want to assure this august gathering that we will do everything possible with the power of God to ensure that these projects are completed and completed on time. Every road project that we are doing has a life shape of between 50 and 100 years. This is a complete departure from the previous practice where most roads completed never lasted up to 5 years,” he said.

Speaking, Dangote, who also
endorsed stronger disciplinary measures for professional misconduct, said such sanctions should be fair, transparent and proportionate to the gravity of offences.

He noted that engineering regulation should evolve beyond merely responding to failures.

According to him, effective regulation must recognise varying degrees of professional misconduct.

“There is a clear distinction between an administrative oversight, professional negligence, gross misconduct or deliberate actions. Justice and effective regulation require that these different circumstances be treated differently”, Dangote said.

He said suspension of professional licences may become necessary in cases involving reckless conduct, noting that such practices are already established in advanced jurisdictions.

“Regulation may require licence suspension, particularly where reckless conduct is involved. This is already reflected in many advanced jurisdictions. The objective is not simply to punish. The objective is to improve professional conduct”, he said.

He, however, cautioned against attributing every engineering failure solely to individual professionals, pointing to broader systemic challenges.

He stated that disciplinary actions must inspire confidence in the regulatory system.

“An effective sanction must always be proportionate to the gravity of the offence and the risks posed to public safety. Enforcement must be transparent, objective and consistent, irrespective of status, influence or institutional affiliation.

“The framework should encourage corrective action. There should be zero tolerance for repeated offenders whose actions endanger lives and compromise national infrastructure”, Dangote said.

Delivering his welcome address earlier, COREN president, Professor Sadiq Abubakar, highlighted some of the achievements of COREN under his leadership including the reintroduction of a mandatory one-year residency/ERP for engineering graduates, new digital verification, and nationwide compliance inspections, creation of regional and sectoral enforcement structures, training and certification of hundreds of investigators/evaluators, and steps toward international accreditation alignment among others.

Acknowledging the tall task before engineers in the interest of national development, the COREN boss said the theme of this year’s assembly, “Advancing Public Safety in Nigeria through Strategic Engineering Regulation, Enforcement and a Tiered Sanction Regime,” reflects one of the most critical responsibilities entrusted to COREN by law-the protection of the public through effective regulation of engineering practice. Public safety is the ultimate measure of engineering success.

He however maintained that unregistered practitioners, enforcement gaps, funding limits, and evolving technological and climate risks threaten progress and require stronger risk-based, proactive regulation and sustainable funding.