Tag: Apapa ports

  • Govt begins decongesting Apapa Ports with freight train haulage

    Govt begins decongesting Apapa Ports with freight train haulage

    • Train to carry 90 containers daily from Lagos to Ibadan

    The dream of decongesting Apapa Ports came alive yesterday as the Minister of Transportation, Saidu Alkali kicked off cargo movement on the Apapa Port standard gauge branch line from the APM Terminal, Apapa.

    The minister said the inauguration of the freight train from Apapa Ports to Ibadan would move 90 40-foot container cargoes daily.

    He said the cargo freight could run thrice daily and had the capacity of carrying 30 40- foot containers in each trip, with the shipper having the opportunity of returning their empty cargo by the train.

    He said the freight train would decongest the ports and save shippers from accumulation of demurrage as a result of the inability to return empties to the terminal operators.

    According to the minister, only one track would be functioning for now and would be made use of by the Nigerian Railway Corporation until the Nigeria Customs Service removes the scanning building standing on the tracks which is stopping the completion of the remaining two tracks into the ports complex.

    “The ministry is going to liaise with the Minister of Finance and the Customs concerning the demolition of the scanning centre which is affecting the completion of the remaining tracks into the ports,’’ he said.

    “After laying the two remaining tracks, the cargos will get out of ports seamlessly and the two remaining lines will enter the ports,” Alkali said.

    Also speaking, the NRC Managing Director, Mr Fidet Okhiria, said the railway is happy that the cargo freight is coming up during the regime of the new minister.

    Read Also: How to decongest Apapa Ports for enhanced revenue, by Reps

    Okhiria said though the railway had been deploying freights on the narrow gauge even to Kano before, it had to stop due to the challenges of insecurity and bad sections of the tracks. He said the corporation is happy that the minister is inaugurating the freight movement of cargos to Papalanto and Moniya, in Ibadan.

    “What we are using temporary is the transitional line, as we continue to make headway to ensuring the eventual pull down of the Customs building which would enable us have the three lines that is slated for port operations.

    “We resorted to using the transitional line in order to ensure that the operation start so that we don’t give room for vandalization, when the tracks is not in use the it is vulnerable to vandalisation,” Okhiria said.

    He said that if the track was used frequently that people would see the value and respect the tracks.

    The Executive Director, Bueno Logistics, Mazi Jetson Nwankwo, whose firm is partnering with the railway to commence the freight movement said that he had been working in ensuring that railway was optimally utilised and decongest the roads.

    “Currently we are partnering with the Nigerian Railway Corporation and the terminals operators to help Lagos to decongest its roads from container trucks.

    “The new standard gauge line that has entered APM Terminal is a big deal, it will be able to carry at least 60 containers at a go from Apapa complex, and if we do that every day, soon, you will see a drop in the number of containers on the bridges.

    “The deal is to move the containers from Apapa port complex to Moniya in Ibadan where we have a very big freight terminal.

    The tour took the new minister to visit the facility at the Mobolaji Johnson Station at Ebute Meta, Yaba, the Bola Ahmed Tinubu Station at Apapa, and the Prof Yemi Osinbajo Station at Kajola, where he also inspected the Kajola Wagon Assembly Plant where the China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC) already stacked some fully assembled wagons and ready for operations.

    The minister took a tour of the Wagon Assembly Plant and expressed happiness that the CCECC  has gone very far not only in delivering on promises on job creation, saying that he is happy that the wagon can generate 5000 jobs for Nigerians.

    He said he would ensure that all existing contractual agreements that the nation has entered into would be sustained and that the Bola Tinubu administration is determined to sustain the drive on railway rehabilitation and modernisation saying it is the way to go for the country. 

  • Task force to sanitise Apapa Ports roads this week

    Sanity will be restored on Apapa Ports road this week,  the Presidential Task Force on the road said on Monday.

    The task force Chairman, Kayode Opeifa, told The Nation that they were working round the clock to ease the pains of motorists and other users of the road.

    With ‘’appreciable success’’ recorded at the Western Avenue, Iponri, Ijora, and Ajegunle axis, Opeifa said attention has shifted to Apapa-Oshodi to ensure sanity on the road.

    President Muhammadu Buhari, two weeks ago, ordered trucks and trailers off Apapa port and all access road within 72 hours. The task force was raised to ensure compliance with the order within two weeks.

    Read Also: ‘How to tackle Apapa port gridlock’

    The task force moved to Apapa on  May 23,  met with  stakeholders and leadership of all road transport unions  till May 24, and started enforcing the order on May 25.

    Opeifa told reporters on Sunday that attention would be around Coconut to Tin Can, which he described as ‘’a thorny spot’’ because of the collapsed road between Mile 2 and Tin Can.

    He said he was heading to Coconut with  policemen to clear the area, adding that the team will work  throughout the Eid-el-Fitri holidays to sanitise the area.

  • Many structures may go for standard gauge extension into Apapa ports, says Fed Govt

    The Federal Government has approved the demolition of some structures at the Apapa Ports to pave the way for the extension of the standard gauge into the ports complex.

    The Transportation Minister, Mr Rotimi Amaechi, gave the approval after inspecting the railway modernisation Project Addendum II of the Lagos-Ibadan section with extension of the rail line into Apapa Port in Lagos.

    He said: “If we need to demolish, we should go ahead and demolish. But we must ensure that we explore all alternatives to achieve our main aim of connecting all terminals here at Apapa with rail services.”

    Notable ports terminals affected are: Apapa Bulk Terminal Ltd (ABTL), APMT Terminal Limited, ENL Consortium Limited and Greenview Development Nigeria Limited (GDNL), a private terminal owned by Dangote Group.

    Speaking yeaterday in Lagos when he led an on-the-spot inspection of the affected port terminals, Amaechi urged the project contractor and ports engineers to explore alternatives before demolishing the affected structures inside the ports terminals.

    The minister, who was accompanied by the Managing Director of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Hajia Hadiza Bala Usman, said: “It is important we get the rail services right inside the ports to ease the congestion we are having there. But while we do this, the contractors have been advised to ensure that ports activities are not disrupted while their work is going on.”

    He added that the five terminals at Apapa Ports would be linked by rail for easy evacuation of cargoes.

    Hajia Usman said affected port terminals would be compensated from the dues they pay into the Federal Government’s coffers.

    She said: “Right now, certain warehouses inside the ports will have to be removed. We have some portions of land inside the ports that will have to be reclaimed by government from the operators. It is important that the rail lines get to the quay side. I think that is more important than what will be demolished for now.

    “However, whatever we do, we are going to be mindful of ports operations. We will ensure that the quay side is left available for operations while certain sections in the ports are being rehabilitated.

    “For port terminal operators that will suffer losses, in terms of demolition of warehouses or structures, we are going to ensure that such operators get compensation. We are going to open discussions with such operators to ensure that any attendant compensation relating to the revenue they pay to us is recognised with the value of what they have lost.

    “After today, we are going to have another meeting in two weeks’ time to determine the increase in scope, which the project will have. This is because this visit has expanded the scope of the Lagos-Ibadan rail project.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Apapa ports of national shame

    Nigeria has 853 kilometres of coastline running through seven of the southern states of the federation, namely Lagos, Ondo, Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers, Akwa Ibom and Cross River. Any of these seven states has the potential of having a sea port that could have been developed if we have had visionary planners.

    When the British developed the port of Lagos after its bombardment in 1851, the idea of being the main port of Nigeria had not crystallized because the idea of a country called Nigeria had not dawned on the British or anybody for that matter. But by the time of amalgamation in 1914, the British realized that Apapa did not have the capacity to be the main port of Nigeria. In spite of several attempts to expand it, the water was too shallow and what later became Victoria Island was too rough for a port. The British then decided to build a port in the eastern part of Nigeria in the area of Diobu and named it Port Harcourt after the then British Secretary of State for the colonies, Sir Lewis Harcourt. But before the port became operational, the First World War broke out in Europe. Money became scarce and the development of the port suffered. After the war, money for reconstruction became a priority and development in all the British overseas territories fell into abeyance and before long, the Second World War broke out in 1939 and ended in 1945.

    Britain itself needed funds from America like other parts of Europe from the Marshall Plan and what would have been a major port in the eastern part of the country was a victim of historical accidents. After independence, rather than build a port in Port Harcourt to complement Lagos, the federal government decided to build Tin-Can Island as an extension of Apapa with the same road approach but without railways which are the normal features of ports everywhere in the world for delivery of exports and evacuation of imports.

    I do not know any port anywhere in the world where goods are evacuated by trucks and lorries. That is the history of the tragedy of Apapa. Perhaps a functioning railway to the port would have made the difference. But what we have are the thousands of articulated trucks snaking through the roads of Lagos and trying to enter and come out of the Apapa Port to the discomfort of road users, residents of Apapa and the drivers of these trucks who live and sleep rough on the streets for weeks. When they finally exit what is effectively their prisons, they drive like escaped prisoners sometimes killing fellow road users. The story of the chaos is made worse by the presence of oil storage tanks in Apapa necessitating oil tankers coming into the port to lift oil to various depots in the country.

    In a normal country, the fuel being carried in fuel tankers would have been piped. But not in Nigeria. The pipes have been waylaid and broken into by petrol thieves who in spite of danger to themselves and the society continue their nefarious activities. If we were a sane country, our four refineries located in Warri, Port Harcourt and Kaduna would have been producing optimally and we would not have had to be importing petroleum products and there would have been no oil storage tanks and fuel tankers to lift oil to different parts of the country. The roads of Lagos would not have been the killing fields they are today.

    The result of this haphazard planning or no planning at all is incalculable. Lives have been ruined. Expensive properties have been damaged beyond repair. Vast areas of prime land have been polluted. A major quarter of Lagos has been ruined and made almost inhabitable. The economy of Nigeria has suffered and billions of revenue that could have been used to develop the country has been lost. The uneven development and concentration of all maritime activities in Lagos has led to massive migration of undesirable jobless people to Lagos thus swelling urban proletariat in Lagos and consequent increase in crime.

    What I find most amazing or distressing is the fact that the federal government that rakes in trillions of Naira from the activities in the port finds it difficult to spend just a fraction of it to keep the goose that lays the golden eggs alive. It is simply short-sightedness. When the issue of Apapa is being discussed in parliament, people will be asking why money needed for the port is not shared out on federal character basis, forgetting that without revenues there will be nothing to share. It is gratifying to note that the federal government is taking palliative effort to once again solve what has become a malignant problem. I wrote about this crazy situation in Apapa about five years ago and nothing has changed and yet a layman like me can proffer straightforward solutions both short term and long term solutions.

    First we must immediately close the port for a few weeks and ask competent companies to work day and night to fix the roads. When fixed, the roads must be continually maintained. The Nigerian Ports Authority must be made to allocate substantial amount of its revenues to the maintenance of the roads and ports facilities. On the alternative, the Apapa Port can be transferred to Lagos State to run and maintain and pay royalties to the federal government like New York in the USA. The long term solution is to immediately plan seven new ports in the aforementioned seven coastal states preferably in collaboration with foreign private interests. In this way, Lagos will be spared of the scourge of being overrun and overwhelmed by trucks and people from up country.

    Hopefully when Dangote completes his refinery, the tank farms in Apapa will be rendered redundant and will have to be closed down. The new Lagos – Kano railways should also begin at the port so that trains and not trucks will evacuate imports.

    One hopes we would have learnt a lesson from the tragedy of Apapa Port. The Lekki – Epe axis with the exclusive economic zone planned for the area, the new airport and ocean port and the Dangote refineries coming up there ought to call for serious thought about evacuation of goods from that axis so that we don’t repeat the Apapa tragedy a second time there. The time to make sure this does not happen is now!

    A fourth bridge across the lagoon terminating in Ikorodu to link up with Ikorodu – Shagamu Road is of absolute necessity or in the alternative, the Lekki- Epe express can be continued to Ijebu Ode from where vehicles going to Edo, Delta, Bayelsa and the eastern states can then proceed. The possibility of linking the Lekki – Epe axis with the national railway should also be a priority if we are to avoid the present Oshodi- Apapa nightmare. Until our illiterate legislators realize that Lagos is the linchpin of the economic development of Nigeria, they will continue to treat Lagos as if it were just another state subjecting it all the time to debate about allocating revenue on federal character basis while cleverly forgetting that Lagos contributes 90 percent of excise duties and the various taxes on manufacturing and services in Nigeria. Service deserves its rewards must be additional principle to the much ballyhooed federal character principle when the case of Lagos is being considered.

  • 25 ships laden with petroleum products, others at Apapa ports

    TwentY-FIVE ships are discharging petroleum products and other commodities at the Apapa and Tin-Can Island ports, the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) has said.

    According to NPA, the other items being offloaded are bulk wheat, steel products, general cargo, petrol, containers and bulk gas.

    They also include bulk charcoal, butane gas, raw sugar, ballast, bulk corn and bulk fertiliser.

    Forty-one other ships are also expected to arrive at the ports between now and August 28 with petroleum products, food items and other goods.

    NPA said the ships would bring general cargoes, bulk fertiliser, buck wheat, lubrication oil, empty containers, bulk sugar and petrol.

    It added that 10 ships had arrived at the ports, waiting to berth with bulk fertiliser, general cargo, bulk sculpture and petrol.

  • 25 ships laden with petroleum products, others at Apapa ports

    TwentY-FIVE ships are discharging petroleum products and other commodities at the Apapa and Tin-Can Island ports, the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) has said.

    According to NPA, the other items being offloaded are bulk wheat, steel products, general cargo, petrol, containers and bulk gas.

    They also include bulk charcoal, butane gas, raw sugar, ballast, bulk corn and bulk fertiliser.

    Forty-one other ships are also expected to arrive at the ports between now and August 28 with petroleum products, food items and other goods.

    NPA said the ships would bring general cargoes, bulk fertiliser, buck wheat, lubrication oil, empty containers, bulk sugar and petrol.

    It added that 10 ships had arrived at the ports, waiting to berth with bulk fertiliser, general cargo, bulk sculpture and petrol.