Audio By Carbonatix
Global ride-hailing firm Uber Technologies Inc on Friday launched a pilot test of a boat service in Nigeria’s commercial capital Lagos to attract commuters seeking to avoid the megacity’s notoriously congested roads.
The United Nations predicts that Nigeria’s population will more than double to 400 million by 2050, which would make it the third most populous country in the world after China and India.
The combination of population growth and congestion has made Nigeria, and more broadly West Africa, attractive to foreign transport companies.
Uber’s chief business officer told Reuters in June the company planned to launch the service to carry travellers in the Lagos megacity of around 20 million people that is built on a lagoon.
The waterway service, UberBOAT, is operated in partnership with local boat operator Texas Connection Ferries and the Lagos State Waterways Authority (LASWA), said the ride-hailing firm.
“This initiative is aimed at providing commuters with an easy and affordable way to get in and out of the city’s business districts,” Uber said in a statement.
The pilot phase will operate on weekdays from 0700 GMT to 1600 GMT on a fixed route between two locations in the city.
Passengers will be charged a flat fare of 500 naira ($1.39) per trip, compared with about 300 naira by minibus for a similar journey in the commercial hub of the West African country where most people live on less than $2 a day.
At a press conference on Friday, Uber officials said there would be four trips a day, carrying up to 35 people on a boat, during the two-week pilot.
Babajide Sanwo-Olu, the governor of Lagos state, said the Uber boat service, and the use of waterways in general, were part of a raft of initiatives aimed at easing congestion that include a programme of road repairs.
“We want ferries that carry 60 to 80 people,” he said, referring to his hopes for the future use of waterways, on Thursday at a forum with businesses.
Uber’s boat initiative follows a number of motorcycle ride-hailing firms that have targeted West Africa as an area for expansion in the last few months.
Technology giant Google also launched a new feature in July that allows Nigerians to hear travel advice in a local voice on Google Maps. Another feature allows users in Lagos to seek directions from “informal transit” services, such as private minibuses.
Latest Stories
-
What is cryptocurrency and why should every Ghanaian care?
33 minutes -
BoG, Microfinance players form joint committee to review sweeping sector reforms
42 minutes -
Agri-Impact CEO meets Israeli Ambassador to strengthen agricultural innovation partnership
43 minutes -
Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire move to align cocoa prices in bid to boost farmer incomes
53 minutes -
Court remands alleged car robber
1 hour -
Police receive DNA report in murdered Immigration officer’s case, await full autopsy report
1 hour -
Labadi Beach Hotel pays SSNIT GH¢17.8m dividend, bigger payout expected this year – Afreh Biney
1 hour -
We will not sell them – SSNIT boss ends speculation over Labadi Beach Hotel and La Palm
2 hours -
World Bank approves $300m support package to help Ghana end double-track system by 2027
2 hours -
Messi equals World Cup goals record with hat-trick in Argentina win
2 hours -
Retirement age reform requires national consensus, not a SSNIT decision – Afreh Biney
2 hours -
Extending retirement age could delay opportunities for youth by up to 7 years – SSNIT boss
3 hours -
Jamaica in talks to accept third-country migrants deported from US
3 hours -
G7 leaders call for strong, coordinated response to Ebola outbreak
3 hours -
Ebola Bundibugyo vaccine candidates could enter Phase 1 trials as early as July
3 hours