Tag: import

  • FG, States, LGs share N619.857bn for February

    A total of N619.857 billion has been distributed as federal allocation for the month of February 2019 among the Federal, States and Local Government Councils.

    A communiqué by the Technical Sub -Committee of the Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) at the end of its February meeting, indicated the gross statutory revenue received was N478.434 billion.

    This sum is lower than the N505.246 billion received in the previous month by N26.812 billion.

    Addressing journalists at the end of the meeting in Abuja on Wednesday, the Director of Funds in the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation (OAGF) Mr. Muhammed Usman, said “Federation Crude Oil Export sales increased by about 46 percent resulting in increased Federation Revenue from $425.00 million previously to $574.95 Million.

    “Shut-in and Shut-down persisted while some Terminals remained closed due to leaks and maintenance.

    “Petroleum Profit Tax (PPT) increased significantly while Companies Income Tax (CIT) recorded a marginal increase. Revenues from Value Added Tax (VAT), Oil Royalty, Import and Excise Duties decreased in February, 2019.”

    Read also: NNPC’s $1.7b debt to FAAC

    The distributable Statutory Revenue for the month is N478.434 billion.

    The total Revenue distributable for the current month (including VAT, Exchange Gain, Excess Bank Charges recovered and Forex Equalization) is N619.857 billion.

    Therefore, from the total distributable revenue for the month, the Federal Government received N257.681 billion representing 52.68 percent; States received N169.925 billion representing 26.72 percent; Local Government Councils received N127.722 billion representing 20.60 percent while the Oil Producing States received N50.946 billion also representing 13 percent derivation revenue.

    Muhammed Usman also disclosed that “the balance in the Excess Crude Account (ECA) as at 27th March, 2019 is $183 million.

  • Fuel import costs $15b yearly

    Nigeria is spending about $15billion yearly on fuel importation, the  Group Managing Director, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr Maikanti Baru, has said.

    A statement titled: Green Field Refinery Initiative yesterday quoted Baru as saying the country spends between $12billion to $15billion yearly to reduce the deficit in daily domestic fuel consumption in the country.

    He said the Nigeria’s resort to fuel importation became imperative in order to improve supply and avert scarcity.

    He said the development poses serious threats to the government’s dwindling revenue, if left unchecked.

    According to him, the country’s dwindling fortune was caused by the fall in the international prices of crude oil , adding that the Federal Government is investing in additional refinery capacity alongside private investors, who have demonstrated their readiness to hold some equities in the project.

    Baru said: ‘’To reduce the huge cost expended in importing fuel into the country, especially the money that is being spent in reducing deficit in the supply of the product, the government is investing in refinery capacity, alongside companies that are holding some equities in the refinery project.  “Through this means, the government would be able to meet the country’s gasoline consumption  of 36million litres per day and 10 million litres of kerosene per day.”

    He said government is trying to establish three refineries with approximately 400-550 million barrels per day (bpd) in Lagos, Bayelsa and Kogi states, in order to boost fuel processing in the country.

    Baru said the issue of location, configuration and shareholding structure of the refineries would be determined by the government and the private investors, adding that the refineries  would be market oriented and profit motivated.

    He said the government is in the vanguard of promoting new refineries in order to increase in-country crude oil refinery capacity and further help private investors  to perform in the face of technical and financial challenges facing them.

    Baru said the refineries will boast of state-of-the-art facilities, as well as provide high percentage of white petroleum products. He stressed that the refineries would operate as import substitution plants  that would be supplying refined products to consumers in the domestic market.

    ‘’In addition, the refineries would be exporting to regional and international markets, with a view to make more money.  This means that the refineries are going to play across borders, a development that would enable them to earn  foreign exchange,’’ he added.

    He said the idea would enable Nigeria to become fuel hub in  West Africa ,  which  according to him, boasts of 18 countries, 290 million population and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of $340bilion.

    He said the establishment of new refineries would enable Nigeria to become self sufficiency, as well as encouraging economic growth.

    The refineries, Baru said, would have a multiplier effects on the economy because they would provide direct and indirect jobs for the people.

  • Cautious optimism over proposed ban on palm oil import

    Cautious optimism over proposed ban on palm oil import

    Prompted by the need to boost local production and halt the huge import bill for palm oil, valued  at N116.3 billion in 2017, the National Assembly has renewed the push to ban the importation of palm oil and its allied products. It is envisaged that this will conserve foreign exchange, create jobs and boost the economic diversification push. However, with palm oil refineries operating at 30 per cent installed capacity, there are fears that without first addressing the product’s demand/supply gap, the proposed ban will amount to putting the cart before the horse, Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports.

    The Senate, has renewed the call to ban the importation of palm oil and its allied products. It came at an auspicious time, which was, perhaps, why it enjoyed an overwhelming support of members of the Upper Chamber of the National Assembly and, indeed, operators and stakeholders in the palm oil value chain.

    Although the fresh push to ban the importation of the product came at a time the Federal Government’s diversification agenda, anchored on increased agricultural production and export, was gathering momentum, the move has come under scrutiny by some experts and critical stakeholders.

    Some of them, who spoke with The Nation, described the proposed ban as a welcome development. They were, however, quick to point out that at the 30 per cent installed capacity of the crude palm oil refineries, banning the importation of the product without first addressing its demand/supply gap would be tantamount to putting the cart before the horse

    For instance, the General Manager, External Affairs, PZ Cussons Nigeria Plc, Mr. Muhammed Tahir, said he supports the move to ban the importation of palm oil into the country as this would boost local production. He, however, told The Nation that at present, the crude palm oil refineries operate at about 30 per cent installed capacity.

    The implication of this, he said, was that there was the need to ramp up local production by addressing the issues around the supply of crude palm oil to the refineries. According to him, at 30 per cent installed capacity, the refineries cannot meet demand by individual and industrial users. To him, addressing the demand and supply gap for palm oil is important before banning its import.

    The upper chamber of the National Assembly, recently started fresh move to ban the import of palm oil and its allied products. Waxing patriotic, Senator Francis Alimikhena of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Edo State, said the importation of the product was a threat to the government’s campaign on diversification.

    The lawmaker, who sponsored the motion, titled: “Urgent need to halt the importation of palm oil and its allied products to protect palm oil industry in Nigeria” and also led the debate, recalled with nostalgia that Nigeria, before the 1970s, was a global powerhouse in palm oil production and export.

    Alimikhena, however, lamented that the country lost her leadership position in the global palm oil trade, forcing her to import about 450, 000 tons of palm oil to the tune of N116.3 billion in 2017 alone. He, therefore, insisted that the government must reverse this trend.

    The lawmaker was right. Nigeria was the world leading producer of palm oil in the 1950s and mid-1960s. She was reportedly supplying about 645,000 Metric Tons (MT) of palm oil yearly to markets across the world and boasting an enviable global market share of about 43 per cent.

    Palm oil alone accounted for 80 per cent of Nigeria’s export earnings. It also created millions of direct and indirect employment opportunities for Nigerians. Malaysia, one of the Asian emerging markets, was even said to have obtained the oil palm seedling with which she built her thriving oil palm business from Nigeria.

    Although the Asian Tiger has since refuted this claim, it, nonetheless, underscored Nigeria’s towering status and visibility in the global palm oil industry. Curiously, from controlling over 40 per cent market share, Nigeria has since lost her grip on the business. She  accounts for a paltry seven per cent of total output.

    Malaysia and Indonesia have since surpassed Nigeria as world’s leading palm oil producers and exporters, retaining the second and first position, respectively. Sadly, Nigeria, as at 2016, fell to an unenviable fifth position.

    While Indonesia produces 32 million tons of palm oil, Malaysia boasts 17.7 million tons. And they have been exporting palm oil products to Nigeria. The country, which was once the bride of the international palm oil business, is now a net importer of palm oil to meet her growing domestic demand.

    Africa’s largest economy has between 450, 000 and 500, 000 tons annual palm oil supply shortage, made up of about 300, 000 tons of Technical Palm Oil (TPO) for the production of soap and about 200, 000 tons of Special Palm Oil (SPO) used in the food industry.

    The fact that much of these are  being met through imports, with the attendant humongous loss to Nigeria in foreign exchange is something Alimikhena and, indeed, other concerned stakeholders cannot comprehend hence the current wave of campaign to reverse the trend.

     

    Private operators support ban

    This time, the public sector (Senate) is in the vanguard of the renewed push to return Nigeria to its glory in palm oil production and export. However, the imperative of repositioning the sector to contribute to diversification is not lost on the private sector, which includes farmers, refinery operators and companies that utilise palm oil as raw material for production.

    To them, the proposed ban bode well with the private sector’s age-long agitation to embrace the Backward Integration Policy (BIP) to encourage local production and ultimately, create jobs and conserve foreign exchange. This was why, for instance, the Plantation Owners Forum of Nigeria (POFN) has thrown its weight behind the move.

    The Forum through its Executive Secretary, Mr. Fatai Afolabi, said the Senate’s move deserved the commendation and support of all Nigerians. According to him, the importation of palm oil and allied palm products were threats to Federal Government’s campaign on diversification of the economy through increased agricultural production and exports.

    Afolabi was particularly peeved that Nigeria, which once held sway in palm oil production and export, imported about 450,000 tons of the product valued at N116.3 billion last year. He, therefore, urged the Federal Government to halt the importation in order to boost local production.

    As far as POFN and indeed, other private sector operators are concerned, Nigeria has no reason spending scarce resources importing the product when Mother Nature has strategically positioned her to call the shot in global palm oil production and export.

    For one, Nigeria and indeed, most parts of Africa, especially West Africa, lie in the world’s oil palm belt – a region which produces the best results for oil palm plantations. Also, she was, and is still, endowed with enormous human resources and fertile arable land to support large scale cultivation of palm oil.

    According to experts, Nigeria’s all-year-round hot weather, a lot of sunshine, abundant rain, rich, deep, flat and permeable soil, among others, are some of the features that make Nigeria most suitable for cultivation of oil palm plantations.

    While hot temperatures allow the oil palm to grow many leaves and, as a result, produce more fruit, oil palms need a lot of sunshine to grow well. It also needs access to water and mineral salts deep in the soil to do well hence the need for a permeable soil like Nigeria’s.

    But, sadly, the country has evidently failed to translate these huge advantages into maintaining a strong position in palm oil production and export.

     

    Where Nigeria got it wrong

    According to experts, Nigeria put the wrong foot forward and lost its economic bearing when she turned her back on agriculture following the discovery of crude oil in commercial quantity in the 70s. Before independence, agriculture was Nigeria’s economic mainstay, with more than 70 per cent of the population engaged in the sector.

    Alimikhena observed, for instance, that apart from various food crops produced in the country, Nigeria was a major producer of palm oil/kernel, cocoa, groundnut and rubber. But following the discovery of crude oil in commercial quantity, agriculture was neglected, while attention was shifted to oil.

    While acknowledging that Nigeria is endowed with the land and manpower to boost palm oil production, the lawmaker noted that the focus should be directed towards returning to pre-independence status in palm oil production. “We have no business importing palm kernel or any oil palm product from any country,” he pointed out.

    Alimikhena said the focus should be directed towards returning Nigeria to pre-independence status in palm oil production, noting that importation was hurting the local palm industry and depleting the nation’s foreign reserve.

    He also said it was threatening the industry’s viability into which many Nigerians have sunk huge sums of money in support of government’s export promotion drive. He expressed hope that if the palm oil industry is fully developed, it will guarantee mass employment and boost the nation’s foreign exchange earnings.

    Some of his colleagues in the Senate could not agree less, with Senator Theodore Orji (Abia-PDP), saying, for instance, that there was need to establish a special fund to encourage local production of palm oil.

    Orji expressed concern that many oil production plants were moribund. While pointing out that palm oil used to be a major income ear      ner for the country, he said unfortunately many plants are dead.

    For Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, the importance of reviving the palm oil industry cannot be over-emphasised. He, therefore, said there was need to properly position the sector to play its role as one of the major income earners for the country. He added that reviving the sector will boost employment.

    However, those  critical of the fresh move to ban the importation doubt if the Federal Government has the political will to do so let alone follow up with the introduction of policies targeted at encouraging local production.

  • We won’t depend on import again, says President

    We won’t depend on import again, says President

    President Muhammadu Buhari has said the country must never return to the dark days of import dependence.

    He spoke when he received members of the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative at the State House, Abuja.

    The President praised members for making a success of the initiative.

    Buhari said: “I am extremely impressed by how the programme has evolved since my meeting with His Majesty, the King of Morocco 15 months ago.

    “I have been monitoring your progress closely. But hearing it first hand and seeing your faces today is truly a wonderful experience.

    “In your presentations today, we have heard stories of sacrifices, where all the stake holders agreed that collective progress superseded personal interest.”

    He thanked Jigawa State governor and the Fertiliser Producers and Suppliers Association of Nigeria (FEPSAN) for their efforts in the initiative’s progress.

    “Firstly, let me thank the Governor of Jigawa State who virtually relocated to Abuja to oversee the successful take off of this project. I must also express my profound gratitude to the people of Jigawa State for allowing us to borrow him on this very important national assignment which indeed, has changed the lives of millions of Nigerians across the country.

    “I will also congratulate the members of the Fertiliser Producers and Suppliers Association of Nigeria (FEPSAN) for their remarkable work to date. Under the able leadership of your President, Thomas Etuh, you were able to produce quality products and make it available and affordable across the country within three months. Although you were all competitors in the past, you all put aside your differences and came together to deliver on this important program. So thank you for putting Nigeria first. You must continue on this track.”

    Buhari expressed satisfaction with the Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) for its contributions to the initiative.

    “You moved away from your comfort zone and pushed your capital into the rural economy. I always talk about the endless opportunities in the rural economy if only people would look with an open mind. I will urge you to continue on this track. Unless we create an inclusive and diversified economy, the progress of our country, and its future generations, will always be held hostage by external factors such as global oil prices.

    “Special thanks to the three banks. I was told by my Chief of Staff that when this project started, over 15 banks were asked to participate. But only three of you answered this call. I want to ask you to continue to support the PFI expansion plans presented today. Government will continue to work and provide the enabling environment,” the president said.

    He said unlike in previous governments where trucks conveying fertiliser would miraculously disappear in transit, none of the 3,333 trucks used for the programme last year went missing.

    “I want to assure all participants of the PFI that, we will continue to provide adequate security so that this programme, and its positive impact on Nigeria, is sustained,” Buhari promised.

    On the partnership between the Central Bank of Nigeria, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development and governors to ensure Nigeria feeds itself, he said: “I want to encourage you to continue on this track. Specifically, you must all support programmes like the PFI and work together to ensure we never return to the dark days of import dependence. I am pleased to hear that already, the CBN is working with the commercial banks on programs that will further expand and enhance the PFI.”

    He called for the availability of fertilizer for farmers in the South this rainy season and urged the Ministry of Finance and NSIA to engage the Governors Forum to conclude their orders.

    Buhari directed the CBN to work with the commercial banks to ensure affordable capital for farmers and agro dealers.

    He also challenged others involved in the value chain to play their parts: “The NSA and the security agencies should be ready to allow and protect the movement of all agricultural goods. Specifically, issues relating to end user certificates must be prioritised.

    “The NPA should provide all the necessary support required to expedite the offloading and evacuation of the imported materials.

    “And finally, the NSIA and FEPSAN, under the able leadership of the Governor of Jigawa, must ensure quality and affordable fertiliser is available to farmers at the right time.”

  • Farmers, others kick over N116b palm oil import

    Stakeholders in the agricultural sector have kicked against palm oil   import , urging President Muhammadu Buhari and the Federal Executive Council (FEC) to halt the trend.

    Nigeria, according to a report, spent N116.3 billion on palm oil import last year.

    Speaking with The Nation, the farmers and members of the Plantation Owners Forum of Nigeria (POFN) said they were in support of the move by the Senate to ban palm oil import.

    The Senate urged the Federal Government to ban palm oil import to encourage local production and protect the farmers.

    The POFN said the adoption of a motion entitled: “Urgent need to halt the importation of palm oil and its allied products to protect palm oil Industry in Nigeria” by the Senate deserved commendation and support of all Nigerians.

    The group commended the sponsor of the motion, Senator Francis Alimikhena, for decrying the importation of palm oil.

    POFN’s Executive Secretary Mr Fatai Afolabi joined the Senate and Alimikhena in expressing concern that importation of palm kernel and allied palm products were threats to Federal Government’s campaign on diversification of the economy through increased agricultural production and exports.

    The group said it was unhappy that Nigeria imported about 450,000 tonnes of palm oil worth N116.3 billion last year, urging the Federal Government to stop it to boost local production.

  • House panel probes alleged import fraud

    House panel probes alleged import fraud

    The House of Representatives Committee on Customs has begun investigations into alleged multi-billion naira fraud committed by some companies through massive breach of importation procedures, leading to huge loss of revenues to the Federation Account.

    Chairman of the committee James Abiodun Faleke, who made this known to reporters yesterday in Abuja, said the committee had invited those companies to come and clear the allegations against them or face the wrath of the law.

    “You recall the House in plenary on December 9, 2017 mandated the committee to investigate these alleged infractions of import procedures leading to monumental loss of revenue to the nation. The committee is determined to carry out a thorough forensic investigation in line with its mandate,” he declared.

    According to the chairman, “the unpatriotic and fraudulent act of some of these companies had cost the nation a lot financially. We are talking of losses probably in trillions of naira that should have accrued to our common purse.”

    The committee chairman said the panel was not on a witch-hunt mission but on an “altruistic, patriotic mission aimed at recovering our collective patrimony from unpatriotic elements and corporate entities”.

    Faleke said letters detailing the alleged infractions had been dispatched to the affected companies for appropriate responses and fair hearing.

    The committee chairman disclosed that the “Investigation Hearing Commences from March 7, 2018 and all the companies invited are expected to appear on the date allotted to them unfailingly or risk sanctions”.

  • Fertiliser import boosts food production

    The increase in fertiliser importation between January and early this month led to a boost in local rice production, The Nation has learnt.

    The Federal Government was said to have imported one million tons of fertiliser (about 20 million 50 kilogramme (kg) bags of fertiliser) through the Lagos and Tincan Island ports between January and the first week of this month.

    Findings showed that both ports took delivery of 254,157 metric tons of the product valued at N27.95billion from eight vessels.

    Some farmers said the fertiliser imported from Morocco and Europe was sold to them at N5, 500 per bag.

    The last batch of 157, 000 tons scheduled for the last three months arrived the country and was cleared, while the last vessel, V. Sanderling berthed at ENL Terminal few days ago with 43, 180 tons.

    Since the beginning of the year, the country was said to have received at least 957,000 metric tons of the product from ENL Consortium Terminal at the Lagos Port and JosepDam Terminal in Tincan Island Port.

    The fertiliser was ferried to the seaports by Orient Tiger laden with 19, 892 tons; SFL Humber, 37,800 tons; Nord Mumba, 3,570 tons; Desert Calm, 46,200 tons; Team Tango, 13, 199 tons; Silver Lake, 25, 000tons; Skala Wolid,  31,246 tons;  Atlantic Tramp, 36,250 tons and Ionian Eagle, 41,000 tons.

    Also, between last May and June, some 343,657 metric tons of Muriate of Potash (MOP) arrived Lagos and Tincan Island ports, while 359,006 tons of Nitrogen Phosphorous and Potassium (NPK) were imported into the country between July and November.

    Last year, the Federal Government signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Morocco to import NPK and some companies in Europe MOP.

    Following the agreement, the government promised that one million tons of NPK and MOP fertiliser would be exported in five batches of 200,000 metric tons before the end of the year as part of efforts to find solution to food shortage and to further reduce the price of food in the country.

    In the MoU, government explained that it would control 40 per cent shares, while IML Limited, a consortium of private local investors, would hold the remaining 60 per cent equity stake.

    Following the massive importation of the products, the Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma, said recently that the Federal Government would further reduce the price of fertiliser to cut down the price of locally produced rice.

  • Palm oil import causes concern

    group of concerned stakeholders in the oil palm industry has expressed fear over unmitigated importation and dumping of palm oil, saying such practice can kill the industry if not checkmated.

    At a briefing, organised by Plantation Owners Forum of Nigeria (POFON), National Palm Produce Association of Nigeria (NPPAN) and Oil Palm Growers Association of Nigeria (OPGAN), POFON Chairman, Mr. Emmanuel Ibru, who spoke on behalf of the three groups,  lamented that detractors in the oil palm industry were at work again to destabilise the enduring palm oil policy environment.

    He added that they may consequently upturn the gains that the local industry has recorded in the last five years to 10 years in the country.  He feared that, if the plot of palm oil speculators are not checkmated it may spell doom for the local industry.

    He said a company, whose identity he would not reveal, was trying to import crude palm oil and other palm oil related products to the country under the guise of ECOWAS Trade Liberalisation Scheme (ETLS).

    “We have received with shock the clamour by a company that has refused to invest in the Nigerian oil palm value chain to import 95,000 MT of crude palm oil, 50,000 MT of stearin in bulk, 60,000 MT of crude palm oil and 50,000 MT of palm fatty Acid distillates under the West African Trade Liberalisation scheme (ETLS).

    “This is not only absurd, it is as well ridiculous as all the palm oil producing countries in West Africa also import crude oil into their respective countries.  Importing palm oil from any West African country under the guise of ETLS is tantamount to economy sabotage while any attempt or plot to import refined products amounts to smuggling because refined vegetable oil products remain on the import prohibition list. It is on this light we see the ongoing plot by the company as an attempt to procure official stamp and commit economic crime against Nigeria,” he said.

  • Nigerian jailed in Vietnam for import scam

    Nigerian jailed in Vietnam for import scam

    A Southern Vietnam court has sentenced a Nigerian to 18 years in prison over a fake customs enforcement scam,state media reported yesterday.

    Michael Ikechukwu Leonard, 45, was convicted on Thursday of “deceiving others to steal their assets” in a scam which targeted wealthy Vietnamese women.

    The court in Can Tho city determined that Leonard gained his victims’ trust on messaging apps, using various alter egos, including a U.S. army officer.

    The convict was said to have promised to send his victims valuable presents, including laptops and jewellery from the U.S.

    Local accomplices, Huynh Ha Binh, Huynh Ha Uyen and Nguyen Tran Quynh Nhi  would then contact the women, claiming to be customs agents and demand fees or fines for the non-existent shipments.

    They successfully conned a woman in Can Tho out of  28,500 dollars, leading to their arrest.

    It is unclear how many women were duped by the gang in total.

    Leonard’s accomplices received sentences ranging from 12 to 15 years.

  • Fed Govt implements revised import, export guidelines next month

    The Federal Government is to begin the implementation of the 2017 Revised Import and Export Guidelines in January, 2018, as part of its policy of enhancing the ease of doing business in the country.

    The Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, who stated this at a sensitisation workshop on 2017 Revised Import and Export Guidelines in Lagos at the weekend, said  it is mandatory for both imports and exports to be palletised in containers as is the pratice globally.

    She said the take-off date was fixed after due consultations with relevant stakeholders, saying that imports already prepared for shipment into the country will not be affected by the new policy.

    In a speech delivered on her behalf by the Director, Home Finance Department in the ministry, Mrs. Olubunmi Siyanbola, Mrs. Adeosun said the Federal Government has considered all the concerns raised by the trading public regarding the palletisation policy.

    The review of the Nigerian Export and Import Guidelines was motivated by the desire of the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration to deepen ease of doing business in line with the Executive Order 1, she explained.

    Mrs Adeosun said attention has been focused principally on measures to ensure drastic reduction in time spent on processing of exports, ensure a 24-hour clearance of imported cargoes and block leakages of government revenue.

    The minister said Nigeria has moved to the 145th position out of the 190 countries in the World Bank’s ease of Doing Business Index for 2018.

    She said the Federal Government has adopted a number of measures to improve trading across the country’s border. The measures include reduction of documentation requirements from 10 to seven days for exports; and from 14 to eight days for imports. She said additional responsibilities have also been given to the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA) and sanctions have been introduced to enforce compliance.

    Mrs Adeosun said the workshop was, “an auspicious start to interacting with (the) trading public and is tailored to enlighten the relevant stakeholders on the major provisions of the 2017 revised Import and Export Guidelines”.

    Speaking earlier, the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Finance, Dr. Mahmoud Isa-Dutse said until the review, the Export and Import Guidelines had become obsolete and had constituted a huge administrative impediment to smooth export and import operations in Nigeria. He said the Export Guidelines came into effect in 2007, while the Import Guidelines had been in existence since 2013.

    Represented by the Director of Information in the Ministry, Salisu Na’inna Dambatta (who endorsed a statement from the forum), the permanent secretary expressed optimism that the revised guidelines will eliminate the bottlenecks that have militated against efficient conduct of trade across the country’s borders, which had contributed to the declining ranking of the country in this regard.

    The one-day sensitisation workshop featured presentation of papers, panel discussions, and questions and answers session.

    A communiqué was issued at the end of the workshop, which recommended that there should be a Ministerial Directive to all agencies to be integrated into the Single Window Platform in order to have seamless transaction, adding that government should ensure that Scanners at the ports are functional.

    The communique further recommended the use plastic pallets; that Ministry of Mines and Steel Development should be made to own its guidelines in line with the Federal Ministry of Finance (FMF) structure.

    Shipping lines should not be sanctioned or penalised for vessels not palletised but the importers should bear the risk while there is need to automate the NXP Form by Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the communique added.