The Minister of Transportation, Saidu Alkali, yesterday announced that the federal government had commenced the conversion of railway locomotive engines from diesel to Compressed Natural Gas (CNG).
The minister, who disclosed this during an inspection of the retrofitting exercise at Idu train station in Abuja, stated that if successful, the locomotive engines will work on 70 per cent diesel and 30 per cent gas.
Alkali, while speaking on the sidelines shortly after the inspection, explained that the process was currently at an advanced stage as the engine is designed in such a way that diesel is used to power the engine, after which it is switched to gas.
He said: “Nigeria is the first African country to convert diesel engine to gas. The engine will work 70 per cent on diesel and 30 per cent on gas. At the start of the locomotive, you use diesel ones and after starting it, you switch to gas.
“We have interacted with the engineers, and the process is at an advanced stage, we are going to test-run the engine tomorrow (Tuesday) and then determine when we will start rolling out the CNG locomotives.”
Speaking on the benefits, Alkali said it would bring down the cost of maintenance by about 60 to 70 per cent as well as control emissions, given that once the locomotive moves to gas, there won’t be gas emissions.