The Minister of Water Resources and Sanitation, Prof. Joseph Utsev, disclosed this in a statement on Thursday at the end of a meeting with NESG members at his office in Abuja.
Utsev stressed the significance of private sector engagement in realising the ministry’s goals and commended the NESG for its contributions to Nigeria’s development.
He pledged to collaborate closely with the group to accelerate the implementation of the ministry’s water resources and sanitation mandate, to take Nigeria to the next level in tandem with the government’s Renewed Hope Agenda.
Speaking at the meeting, NESG Chief Executive Officer, Dr. Tayo Aduloju, said that at the inception of the summit, the government and private sector had jointly established six fundamental principles as the basis for a modern economy.
He listed the principles as democracy, national interest governance, the rule of law, enabling business environment, private sector commitment, and free enterprise.
He highlighted the pivotal role of the summit in driving transformation in Nigeria, some of which included the conceptualisation of the Global System for Mobile, pension reform, liberalisation of the maritime sector, and numerous development plans.
Aduloju affirmed the private sector’s readiness to collaborate with the ministry in implementing strategic commitments to enable the administration fulfill its mandate.
This, he said, would be done by attracting substantial international investments and transforming the country’s water resources into valuable assets.
The Thematic Head for Water and Sanitation under the Infrastructure Policy Commission of NESG, Mr Gabriel Ekanem, elaborated on the group’s previous collaborations with the ministry.
According to him, these collaborations encompassed areas such as water supply, data collection, development of a water resources master plan, and regulatory frameworks for water resources management.
In attendance were the Permanent Secretary, Dr Didi Walson-Jack, and several directors from the ministry.
NAN