Tag: Maritime

  • ‘How maritime sector will fare in 2018, 2019’

    ‘How maritime sector will fare in 2018, 2019’

    The 2018/2019 forecast on the maritime sector is of a growth of between 2.5 and 5 per cent. However, red flags are also raised on factors that can stall the growth, writes OLUKOREDE YISHAU.

    Dr. Doyin Salami, a lecturer at the Lagos Business School, wore his analytical cap well on Tuesday. Salami found himself reviewing the 2018-2019 forecasts on the maritime sector. The scholar, who noted that forecasts were essential tools for growing an industry, pointed out that the gaps in the sector must be filled by policy makers to realise its potentials. He urged investors, local and international to take the forecast serious as a way of enhancing the growth of their businesses.

    The Nigerian Maritime Industry Forecast for 2018 and 2019, the first of its kind in the sector, is aimed at serving as a compass for those willing to do business in the country’s maritime domain. The forecast reviewed developments in the industry last year, shows expected developments in policy and regulatory environment for the maritime sector in 2018 and 2019 and looks at emerging opportunities and challenges for the industry.

    The forecasts highlight key drivers of the sector, such as geographic factor, availability of skilled labour force, an efficient and effective regulatory environment, manpower and human capacity development, maritime infrastructural development, globalisation and new technology amongst others.

    Salami’s take was not radically different from the Secretary General of the Abuja Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) and former Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Mrs. Mfon Usoro. Usoro, a lawyer, commended the forecast as a great interaction with the industry players to move the sector forward. Furthermore, she also observed that the increased presence of NIMASA activities in the maritime sector of the West and Central Africa sub-region is an indication that the present leadership of the Agency is on course.

    The duo spoke of a sector which plays a major role in the exploitation, distribution and export of Nigeria’s ocean resources and boasts of a total annual freight cost of between $5 and $6 billion dollars annually.

    Salami and Usoro took their positions in Lagos yesterday after NIMASA DG Dr. Dakuku Peterside presented maritime industry’s forecasts for this year and next year. The highlights of the forecasts   are: the maritime industry is projected to grow by 2.5 – 5 per cent; there will be more demands  for maritime services in Nigeria; total fleet size will grow by 4.08 per cent in 2018 and 4.41 per cent in 2019; oil tanker fleet size will decrease by 2.23 per cent in 2018 and increase by 1.7 per cent in 2019; non-oil tanker fleet size will increase by 8.15 per cent in 2018 and 8.72% in 2019 and the oil rig count will increase by 27.67 per cent in 2018 and 0 per cent in 2019.

    With a coastline of about 853km and about 10,000km of Inland Waterways, 12 Nautical Miles of Territorial Waters, 200 Nautical Miles of Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), Nigeria should have no problem achieving the projections. The fact that Nigeria imports over l50 million metric tons of non-oil cargo and approximate 1,500,000 units of containers a year, analysts say, should make meeting the projections easy. They also point at the facts that total cargo throughput in 2015 stood at 195,969,200 metric tonnes showing a marginal increase of 0.8 per cent over the 2014 figure of 194,484,142 metric tonnes. The current aggregate of the cargo throughput exceeds $15,000,000,000 a year through formal import orders.

    Speaking at the presentation, Peterside said: “As a regulator, we are driven by values and commitment, as these are the only ways that investors can be attracted to harness the great potentials in our maritime sector. On our part, we will continue to work out incentives and maritime sector specific interventions to attract investments.”

    Critical to the realisation of the projections in the forecasts are some bills now in the National Assembly.  These include the Anti-Piracy Bill, the establishment of the Maritime Development Bank, Inland Fisheries Amendment Bill, the Deep Offshore and Inland Basin Production Sharing Contract Amendment Bill and the Cabotage Act Amendment Bill 2017.

    “All these if passed to Law will help realise the dream of making Nigeria the maritime hub in Africa,” said Peterside.

    He added: “Whilst the oil sector remains one of the pillars of the Nigerian economy and is a catalyst for measuring our economic growth, the success of this sector is dependent on the Maritime Sector which continues to play a strategic role in the Economy of the Country.

    “A number of factors have contributed to the gradual growth that we have recorded such as the receding crime in the Niger Delta region; the Deep Blue Scale Up of our Maritime Security Architecture is addressing the immediate challenges in this area and is aimed at suppressing the emerging threats on our waters.

    “Government’s commitment through initiatives such as the Presidential Order on Ease of Doing Business continues to yield positive results in our Ports. The on-going Infrastructural reforms in the transport sector are all indicators that we are walking in the right direction.”

    In a foreword to the publication, Minister of Transportation Rotimi Amaechi said: “The Maritime Domain remains the dominant medium for global shipping and commerce and it holds the key for unlocking the streams of opportunities in the industry in such areas as: renewable energy, fisheries, maritime transport, waste management, tourism, and biodiversity.

    “However, International and global economy influence the maritime sector, especially as it relates to defining the trade pattern, standards and international best practices.

    “The Nigerian government as regulator of the Maritime sector is committed to partnering with industry stakeholders to ensure economic growth and competitiveness of Nigeria’s Maritime Domain. All over the world Public Private Partnership drive government initiatives in addressing the infrastructural needs of a nation.

    “Consequently, the presentation of Nigeria’s Maritime Industry forecast by NIMASA is a novelty geared at bringing to the front burner critical maritime industry issues and best global practices to guide investors and stakeholders in harnessing the potentials of the blue economy in the next two years (2018 and 2019) and beyond with focus on emerging opportunities and challenges in the maritime industry.

    “There is no doubt that the maritime sector is highly susceptible to technological dynamics and changes which require huge funding and investment for achieving effectiveness and efficiency.”

    Significantly, the publication devotes attention to the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB), a subset of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB). This bill seeks to bring under one law the various legislative, regulatory, and fiscal policies, instruments and institutions in the petroleum industry. It seeks to repeal the 16 petroleum industry acts

    On the likely impact of the bill on the maritime sector, the report noted: “Shipping has always been of strategic importance to the oil and gas industry. Not only is over 70% of all crude oil production transported by ships, more and more oil productions activities are being carried out offshore. This shows that the oil industry relies heavily on the maritime industry for its smooth operations. Whatever happens in the oil and gas industry is likely to affect the shipping industry and vice versa.

    “It is estimated that Nigeria has lost over $50 billion worth of investment in the oil and gas industry since the last 16 years which could have culminated in additional 1.5 million barrels per day crude oil production for the country, which has continued to heighten the agitation for the passage of the PIB.

    “With full implementation, the PIGB will ensure: Increased Cabotage Activities: An increase in investment in the industry, means more production activities and more production activities means more shipping logistics requirement. The Cabotage trade in Nigeria is 95% within the industry, so we are likely to see an increase in investment if the act meets the expectations of industry practitioners.

    “Increased Demand for Crude Oil Tankers: If there are more investments in the oil and gas industry, there will be more oil production and more oil production means more crude oil tankers for export. Nigeria exports 100% of its crude oil by sea, so, an additional 500bpd of crude oil production in the next one or two years will amount to 182,500,000 barrels per year or 25,347,222 MTS of cargo per annum. This volume of cargo will require a minimum of 91voyagies of a very large Crude carrier (VLCC) vessel to lift, which will generate a lot of activities in the maritime industry.

    “The immediate impact of an increased investment in the oil and gas industry is the massive importation of equipment for oil and gas production. This will see more vessels calling Nigerian ports, more revenue for the government and more business for auxiliary services providers in the industry.

    “It is also believed that the passage of the PIGB will attract multinationals into the downstream sector of the industry leading to the setting up of refineries which will eventually lead to Nigeria being a net exporter of refined petroleum products. If this happens in the next one or two years it will lead to the demand of refined petroleum tankers and more importantly it will create a very robust bunkering business in the maritime industry, which is capable of generating over $3 billion per annum.”

    The publication also pointed out challenges capable of derailing the growth. These include security, financing, efficiency of ports, labour services and more.

    On security, it noted: “The high number of incidents of piracy and armed robbery against ships in the Gulf of Guinea has become a growing concern to the maritime industry, which is heavily affected by these incidents. Although the acts of high sea brigandage have been controlled to some extent, the economic implications of piracy still remain enormous, cutting across all other sectors. Ship owners use private armed security guards on their vessels, while commuting the dangerous pirate zones in Nigeria. These incidences disrupt business and hamper the growth of the maritime industry.

    “As a result of this appalling situation, it has become more expensive for ships to come into Nigeria. While some of the pirates are heavily armed with sophisticated weapons and sometimes hold victims hostage, others are robbers with minimal weapons and hackers. The solutions to these attacks include the utilisation of surveillance facilities, deployment of security personnel able to identify and man flash points (entry and exit points in Nigerian waters) and installation of facilities that can take snapshots of real time.”

    The publication observed that the labour market in the industry presents a significant challenge to maritime business services and activities.

    “The growing demand for seafarers in Nigeria could mean that even a successful maritime education division in the country might not produce enough Nigerian-based seafarers to support the continued needs of the maritime industry,” the publication noted.

    It added that increases in vessel size present challenges for ports and shipping companies. “The need to accommodate greater numbers of larger vessels creates challenges for ports if they do not have the capacity to accept such ships,” the publication said.

    Over the years, the report said, the maritime industry has been stunted by insufficient funding. This has led to gross inefficiency and lack of effectiveness in the management of shipping and maritime industry services.

    “These have, indeed, affected investments in maritime infrastructure and equipment, which are critical to the efficient delivery of services in shipping and maritime operations. With the ocean economy projected to be significantly larger than the traditional maritime economy, there are clear imperatives for greater focus on key growth areas,” it said.

    Other critical issues germane to achieving the projections are: promotion of tourism, development of related economic activities, enhancement of industrial growth and development and socio-political harmony.

    Critical to the expected growth is the challenge of the transition from the Free On Board (FOB) trade term, which favours foreign ship owners in crude lifting to the Cost Insurance and Freight (CIF), which will enable indigenous ship owners to begin to lift crude.

    Speaking at a forum to address the challenge, Minister of State for Petroleum Dr. Ibe Kachikwu said the issue had lingered too far and urged participants to fashion out resolutions that would help the country.

    Peterside, in a paper titled “The Imperatives of Changing Nigeria’s Crude Oil Affreightment Trade Terms From FOB to CIF”, said the CIF if implemented will “encourage indigenous fleet expansion, lead to massive job creation for qualified Nigerian Seafarers, create opportunities for mandatory sea time experience for Nigerian cadets and build expertise and competence in international shipping trade”

    He went on: “Nigeria is one of the major exporters of oil and gas resource in the world, and she averages an output of 1.92 million barrels of crude oil per day so this volume generates huge freight for carriers. Regrettably, Indigenous shipping operators have insignificant share of the freight earned from the carriage of Nigeria’s crude compared to foreign counterparts”.

    Unlike the situation in Nigeria, its OPEC colleagues, such as Iran, Indonesia, Algeria, Kuwait, Angola, Venezuela, UAE and Libya allow indigenous operators to ship crude oil.

    NNPC Group Managing Director Dr. Maikanti Baru stated that the corporation had no reason not to allow Nigerians lift crude. He, however, added that processes have to be followed in opting for the CIF trade term.

    It is hoped that all hands will be on deck to address the challenges so that the expected growth will be achieved.

  • Maritime industry ‘to grow by 2.5 – 5% in two years’

    Maritime industry ‘to grow by 2.5 – 5% in two years’

    The maritime industry is projected to grow by 2.5 – 5 per cent between 2018 and 2019, a forecast has said.

    The Nigerian maritime industry forecast for 2018/2019 was unveiled yesterday in Lagos by Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) Director-General Dr. Dakuku Peterside.

    Total fleet size is to grow by 4.08% in 2018 and 4.41% in 2019. Oil tanker fleet size will decrease by 2.23% in 2018 and increase by 1.7% in 2019. The non-oil tanker fleet size is projected to increase by 8.15 % in 2018 and 8.72% in 2019. Oil rig count is projected to increase by 27.67% in 2018 and 0% in 2019.

    The forecast, the first of its kind in the sector, is intended to serve as a compass for local and international stakeholders willing to do business in the Nigeria maritime domain.

    Peterside said the country’s economic success was dependent on the maritime sector.

    “A number of factors have contributed to the gradual growth that we have recorded, such as the receding crime in the Niger Delta region; the deep blue scale up of our maritime security architecture is addressing the immediate challenges in this area and is aimed at suppressing the emerging threats on our waters.

    “Government’s commitment through initiatives, such as the Presidential Order on Ease of Doing Business, continues to yield positive results in our Ports. The on-going infrastructural reforms in the transport sector are all indicators that we are walking in the right direction.

    “As a regulator, we are driven by Values and Commitment, as these are the only ways that Investors can be attracted to harness the great potentials in our Maritime Sector. We will continue to work out incentives and maritime sector specific interventions to attract investment,” Peterside said.

    Minister of Transportation Rotimi Amaechi said the maritime domain remained the dominant medium for global shipping and commerce.

    To him, it holds the key to unlocking the streams of opportunities in renewable energy, fisheries, maritime transport, waste management, tourism and biodiversity.

    Amaechi said: “However, international and global economy influence the maritime sector, especially as it relates to defining the trade pattern, standards and international best practices.

    “The Nigerian government as regulator of the maritime sector is committed to partnering with industry stakeholders to ensure economic growth and competitiveness of Nigeria’s Maritime Domain. All over the world, Public Private Partnership drives government initiatives in addressing the infrastructural needs of a nation.

    “Consequently, the presentation of Nigeria’s Maritime Industry forecast by NIMASA is a novelty geared at bringing to the front burner critical maritime industry issues and best global practices to guide investors and stakeholders in harnessing the potentials of the blue economy in the next two years (2018 and 2019) and beyond with focus on emerging opportunities and challenges in the maritime industry.

    “There is no doubt that the Maritime Sector is highly susceptible to technological dynamics and changes which require huge funding and investment for achieving effectiveness and efficiency.”

    The Secretary General of the Abuja Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) and former DG of NIMASA, Mrs. Mfon Usoro, praised the forecast as a great interaction with industry players to develop the sector.

    A Faculty at the Lagos Business School, Dr. Doyin Salami, said forecasts were essential tools for growing an industry. He added that the gaps in the sector must be filled by policy makers to realise its potential. He urged all investors, local and international, to take the forecast serious as a way of enhancing the growth of their businesses.

  • Amaechi: powerful people sabotaging maritime security

    Amaechi: powerful people sabotaging maritime security

    The Minister of Transport Rotimi Amaechi yesterday said the maritime security contract approved by President Muhammadu Buhari and the Federal Executive Council (FEC) is being frustrated by some powerful Nigerians.

    The contract, Amaechi said, was awarded by the government about two years ago to secure the nation’s maritime domain.

    Speaking at a stakeholders’ forum organised by the Nigerian Maritime Administrator and Safety Agency ( NIMASA), in Warri, Delta State, Amaechi threatened to give the names of those that are sabotaging the efforts of the government  if the issue becomes messy and could not be resolved on time.

    The theme of the event is ‘ Implementation of Executive Order 1 on Ease of Doing Business in a Secure Maritime Environment.’

    Amaechi identified high level of insecurity and criminalities going on in the  Delta region as one of the major reason  to protect the waters.

    He said the eastern ports are not attractive to business because of the ‘war’ insurance rate imposed by the international shipping companies on any vessel calling at the ports in the area.

    “The war insurance means if the goods cost $10,000 in Lagos I will $20,000 here because there is extra cost on it. There are people in the system sabotaging the $195million contract that will restore sanity and security on our waterways,”he said.

  • Amaechi: maritime security sabotaged by top officials

    Amaechi: maritime security sabotaged by top officials

    Minister of Transportation Rotimi Amaechi said yesterday that the maritime security contract approved by President Muhammadu Buhari and the Federal Executive Council ( FEC) is being frustrated by top Nigerians.

    The contract, Amaechi said, was awarded by the Federal Government about two years ago to secure the nation’s maritime domain.

    Speaking at a stakeholders’ forum organised by the Nigeria Maritime Administrator and Safety Agency (NIMASA), in Warri, Delta State, Amaechi threatened to name those sabotaging efforts of the government.

    The theme of the event is ‘Implementation of Executive Order 1 on Ease of Doing Business in a Secure Maritime Environment.’

    The minister identified the high level of insecurity and criminality in Niger  Delta as reasons  to protect the waters.

    Amaechi said the eastern ports were not attractive because of the war insurance rate imposed by international shipping companies on vessels at the ports in the area.

    “The war insurance means if the goods cost $10,000 in Lagos, it will be $20, 000 here because there is extra cost on it. But I have to inform you that there are people in the system sabotaging the $195 million contract that will restore sanity and security on our waterways.

    “I will not  say who they are until it gets out of control. We are still battling for the contract to see the light of the day,  but if it gets out of hand, we will name them, including the security people that are involved.

    “There are people who make billions of dollars from the water so they don’t want security on the water because if we secure the water, this rubbish will end,” Amaechi said

    He continued:“Those  who spoke said the problem with the Eastern Ports is insecurity, every day I receive reports of insecurity in our waterways, it’s there in Lagos, but it’s worse here in the Eastern ports. Somebody said here that to leave Warri past 2 pm that you are on your own, but I can hop into a vessel or a boat in Lagos and go to anywhere I want to go around there. You can’t do it here. Enter a boat from Port Harcourt to Bonny, alone, and see what will happen to you.

    “Nobody hates South-south, when I was governor I was thinking so, then I was thinking that the Yoruba are deliberately trying to make sure that the Lagos port works as against the Eastern ports, but when I got to the office the first thing I did was to ask for the solution for the Eastern ports to work.

    “I asked the Igbo, I asked the former Governor of Anambra State, Peter Obi, why don’t his people want to import through Port Harcourt or the Warri ports, he gave me the same reason; it costs twice what it will take to import from Lagos, plus all the miscellaneous costs on the road, to import from Port Harcourt to Onitsha or Aba.

    NIMASA Director-General General Dr Dakuku Peterside  assured stakeholders of government’s determination to reposition the sector to international standard.

    The Managing Director of NPA, Ms Hadiza Bala Usman, and the Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Shippers’ Council, Mr Hassan Bello, called for cross fertilisation of ideas to move the sector forward.

    Also, the board Chairman of NPA, Mr Emmanuel Adesoye said it was  laudable as NIMASA, NPA, Shippers Council and other agencies were collaborating to tap the potential in the industry.

    The Chairman, Shipowners Forum, Margaret Onyema- Orakwusi, urged the government to consider the communique drafted at the meeting to re-focus and re-jig the economy for prosperity.

  • FRC berates Maritime Academy over non-remittance of surplus

    FRC berates Maritime Academy over non-remittance of surplus

    The Fiscal Responsibility Council of Nigeria has berated the management of Maritime Academy, Oron, Akwa Ibom State for flouting the Fiscal Responsibility Act by not paying its operating surplus into the Consolidated Revenue Fund (CRF) of the Federal Government.

    Its Acting Chairman, Barr Victor Muruako made this known yesterday at the interface between the scheduled corporation under the supervision of the Commission which is mandated to remit its operating surplus after the end of the year to the Federation Account.

    He noted that the Commission as one of the key government agencies saddled with the responsibility of improving on the independent revenue of the Federal Government and as such all the 122 scheduled corporation as directed by the Minister of Finance must key into this provision to improve on revenue generation that would be useful in executing the budget.

    “The Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2007 mandated our Commission to ensure that Ministries, Departments and Agencies under our supervision remit operating surplus as well as audited account for accountability and transparency in public finance and any corporation that flout this provision will be reported to the Attorney General of the Federation.”

    He maintained that the attitude of the Academy to remit operating surplus over the years calls for concern and he had no option than to ask Legal, Investigation and Enforcement Directorate of the Commission to move in and compel the institution to comply with the provisions of Fiscal responsibility Act.

  • ‘Give more attention to maritime’

    ‘Give more attention to maritime’

    The Federal Government has been urged to pay more attention to the maritime sector this year.

    The Association of Nigerian Licensed Customs Agents (ANLCA) President, Alhaji Olayiwola Shittu, said the government should ensure that more facilities were put in place at the ports to improve revenue generation.

    In an interview with The Nation, he said the problem of access roads to the Lagos ports, which is generating billions of naira, should also be resolved.

    “There is the need to enhance the welfare of the goose that lays the golden eggs. There should be efforts to intervene in the maritime sector like in aviation,’’ he said.

    The ANLCA chief said the Cabotage Fund would have been used to improve inland water transportation, if it had been disbursed last year. He said the fund would have enabled indigenous shipping firms to key into shipping business while waiting for products to buy ocean going vessels.

    Shittu appealed to the government to carry stakeholders along while formulating policies that affect them.

    “The government’s policy on used vehicles is having adverse effects on our members because the rate has dropped significantly.

    “We need to let the government know  many of our members have lost their jobs and car smuggling is on the increase based on the policy,’’ he said.

    Shittu said 90 per cent of the imports of the terminals built for Roll- on-Roll-Out (RORO) were for used vehicles.

    He said since the price of imported vehicles had risen by 100 per cent, people would have no choice than to smuggle in vehicles.

    This, he said, would affect revenue generation by the ports, especially the Tin Can Port, Lagos where touts and ‘port rats’ are disturbing people.

    Shittu said many unwanted persons enter the port daily, despite the recent efforts by Customs.

    He said the call became necessary because the sector was seen as the second largest source of revenue for the country after the oil and gas industry.

    Besides, he said multinationals and others pay taxes or duties and import charges to the government.

    He said poor facilities, sea piracy and insecuritycould scare away investors and hamper ports operations.

    He said importers and clearing agents were not left out of the menace as many of them have also suffered.

    He said huge traffic on the major roads to and within the ports and insecurity are some of the major problems that need to be addressed by the Federal Government intends to sustain investment growth in the sector.

    “The high level of insecurity in the nation’s seaports has become so widespread that every importer must have at one time or the other experienced losses arising from theft within or on the roads that lead to the ports. As a Nigerian, I think it is not too much to ask the government to secure our ports,” he added.

    In another development, maritime lawyers have urged the Federal Government to put policies in place to promote the industry.

    Speaking with reporters in Lagos, the lawyers said the dearth of human and material capacities has become a source of worry in the sector.

    They called on relevant government agencies at the ports to complement stakeholders’ efforts in capacity-building, noting that businesses blink first in the event of any government’s policy breakdown.

    A maritime lawyer and consultant, Mr. Frank Simpson, said the dream of the youth, who seek employment, is only realised through job creation via the sector and human capacity building.

    He said the country could be the number one maritime nation in Africa, if human capacity building was taken seriously.

  • Maritime: Stakeholders seek intervention fund

    Maritime: Stakeholders seek intervention fund

    Our Correspondent OLUWAKEMI DAUDA dissects policies that will shape the sector in 2018, benchmarking it on stakeholders’ expectations.

    During the presentation of the 2018 budget to the National Assembly, President Muhammadu Buhari projected that the much-expected rail to link Apapa and Tin-Can Island ports would come on stream by the end of this year. This, the government said, is part of efforts to reposition the sector.

    But the stakeholders in the sector, however, said what they want in addition to what the President promised, is that the government should  formulate an holistic policy that will enable the country maximise the benefits of  its oceans, seas and water this year.

     

    Use the sea to boost economy

    The Association of Nigerian Licensed Customs Agents (ANLCA) President Prince Olayiwola Shittu said the sector needs intervention fund to boost maritime trade. The government, he said, needs to come up with a better intervention fund like they have done in the aviation, manufacturing and agriculture sectors.

    “Nigeria must emulate countries  like Britain, Rome, America, Australia, Canada, Turkey, Norway, Belgium, Greece, Singapore and India on how best to use the sea to boost the economy.

    “Seventy-six per cent of shipping business that takes place in West Africa is done in Nigeria, which means that the country is very important in the continent sea ladder. Maritime trade must, therefore, be of great interest to President Buhari and the Federal Executive Council (FEC) to boost economy. If we get intervention fund from the government and make it available to the people, millions of Nigerians would have gainful employment and that would solve a lot of problem the country is facing now and in the future,” Shittu said.

     

    Ports’ access roads

    The roads that lead to the seaports in Lagos, Warri, Onne, Port Harcourt, Calabar, and Sapele are impassable.

    These ports’access roads have not attracted the government’s attention. Those leading to the Apapa and Tin-Can Island ports in Lagos are so bad that some stakeholders have described them as a “shame to the nation”, despite efforts by the Dangote Group to fix part of the road.

    The Association of Maritime Truck Owners (AMATO) President Mr Remi Ogungbemi and other port users urged President Buhari to fix the road this year.

    “The bad roads have constituted nightmares to consignees, importers, exporters, freight forwarders and other port users who use the roads to evacuate their goods. The chaotic situation on the road is making port users spend hours daily to access or exit the terminals. The Federal Government must support the NPA in fixing the road this year.

    “Importers, truck owners and clearing agents have agreed to give President Buhari and his team the first two months of this year to fulfil part of his projected plans to fix the Apapa roads, reduce the congestion and its adverse effects on business activities at the ports before we can take the government serious on its plans to uplift the maritime industry this year,” Ogungbemi said.

     

    Addressing misnomer in the oil and gas cargoes by NPA

    At the forum organised by the Minister of Transport Rotimi Amaechi in Lagos last year, the management of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) was confronted with protests by some terminal operators over the designation of a terminal operator as the exclusive handler of oil and gas cargoes.

    This, the protesters said, was against the port reforms carried out by the Federal Government in 2006. The operators insisted that the government must ensure that all ports operations are modeled in line with global best practices which recognised only three classes – bulk, container and multipurpose cargo. This, the protesters insisted, is the practice globally.

    The operators and Prince Shittu, however, gave kudos to President Muhammadu Buhari and the management of NPA for initiating last year, an impressive policy that empowered the authority to return to the three classes as it is done across the globe. Shittu and other operators, importers and clearing agents said they hope that the misnomer in the oil and gas designation which was corrected by the NPA in 2017 to enthrone competitiveness and end the unwarranted monopoly must not be allowed to resurface its ugly face this year.

     

    Inauguration of the Command & Control, Communication and Intelligence Centre by NPA

    Shittu said the unveiling of the Command & Control, Communication and Intelligence Centre by the NPA which was seen as one of the giant strides taken by the authority last year and needs to be improved upon this year to boost the government revenue.

    “The facility is a very good facility because it serves as surveillance for NPA’s activities and for security agencies.While commending the authority for the launch of the provisional, final billing and customer portal module of Revenue Invoice Management System (RIMS) to improve its service delivery and reduce revenue leakage, we hope the management of the Authority will ensure that the efficacy of the platform is not compromised

     

    Acquisition of tug boats and dedication of terminal for exports

    “The acquisition of four new tug boats – MT Daura, MT Ubima, MT Uromi and MT Majiya by the NPA was part of the good policy initiated by the authority to improve operational efficiency that must be sustained this year.

    “Ditto the development of a Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) and establishment of  a dedicated terminal to handle exports aimed at diversifying the economy and improving earnings in line with the mandate of the Federal Government. The terminals include Ikorodu Lighter Terminal for Lagos, Shoreline logistics terminal for Calabar Port and Bua Ports. This year, all the terminals must be mandated by the NPA to establish dedicated desks that will handle all documentations on export, receipt of consignment and the loading of vessels to boost the Easy of Doing Business posture of the current administration,” said, a maritime lawyer Mr DipoAlaka.

     

    Restoring investors’ confidence

    An importer, Chief Celestine Davies, said he was happy with the efforts of the authority to restore investor’s confidence in the maritime industry. “The China Harbour Engineering Company has agreed to take up 15 per cent shareholding in the Lekki Deep Seaport project. Dubai Port World also negotiated an agreement with Josepdam Port Services while the Tanger Med Port of Morocco also indicated willingness to develop a green field terminal logistic base.

    “These initiatives must be pursued by the NPA and translate into a more efficient port sector this year, so that the country achieves its vision of housing the leading port in Africa,” Chief Davies said.

     

    National single window policy

    Chief Davies also urged NPA to continue to collaborate with the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) and Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority to develop the operational framework of establishing the National Single Window, Ports Community System and Scanning services to address the chaotic clearance of cargoes from the port. The collaboration, the importer said, must be used by the NPA this year in simplifying and harmonising formalities that impede trade.

     

    Making more large vessel berth in Eastern Ports

    Many decades after the Eastern Ports came into being, a flat bottom ship, berthed at the Calabar Port last year. It elated importers and clearing agents. The vessel, MV’ Desert Ranger, weighing about  62,000 metric tonnes, made history as the largest ship to call at the port, despite its draft limitations. The heavy vessel, which sailed from Greece, was laden with 60,000 tonnes of wheat. The 200-metre long vessel, which called at the port after the arrival of large MV Desert Rhapsody was seen as a good omen that must not end with last year. Many importers and clearing agents operating at the Eastern ports gave kudos to the management of NPA for achieving the landmark and specifically urged its Managing Director Ms Hadiza Bala Usman to sustain the tempo this year.

     

    Concerns over ports and harbour bill

    Maritime unions are protesting some aspects of the Ports and Harbour Bill as it relates to retrenchment of staff and harbour operations being ceded to the private sector. A former member of the House of Representatives Mr Moroof Akideru-Fatai said it was good that NPA drew the union’s attention to the fact that the bill would not in any way bring about retrenchment or retirement of staff. “The Bill will  allow the NPA to concession some of its operations but it does not stipulate that harbour operation would be handed over to private company by the authority,” he said.

     

    Making the ports competitive and review of the concession agreement

    The Federal Government, through its agencies, stakeholders said, must do everything possible to make the ports competitive.

    ANLCA Publicity Secretary, Dr Kayode Farinto said: “One of the two approaches adopted by the NPA to achieving this is to have a competitive pricing and tariff regime. The agency has embarked on conducting a study to determine respective tariffs and pricing regimes across the region.

    “Also, the authority also set in motion last year, the machinery to review the concession agreements after the initial 10 years. We believe the effort is to reposition the ports by ensuring that critical issues around equipment deployment and infrastructure deployment are carried out by all parties, as entrenched in the agreement.’’

     

    Executive order and 24-hour port operation

    “The Federal Government last May issued an Executive Order on the promotion of transparency and efficiency in business and sequel to this order, government agencies, such as the NPA, NIMASA and the Shippers Council, commenced implementation of some of the directives at the ports. One of the executive orders mandated 24-hour operations at the Apapa Ports and the NPA. Some of the actions taken by the authority included Pilotage  and Berthing of Vessels on 24-hour basis.

    “We are aware that last June 18, when the Order took off, NPA’s Harbours Department handled 20 vessels after 19.00 hours at Lagos Port in the first two weeks of the commencement of 24 hours operation and we hope that the trust of the Order would not be jettisoned by the management of the authority this year. We also appeal to the government to direct other agencies and terminal operators to also make their tariffs accessible anywhere in the world like NPA.

    “Cargo dwell time (CDT), the average time a cargo remains in the terminal from the point of discharge to the point it exits the terminal, must be improved upon significantly this year. The government must support NPA and the Nigerian Shippers Council in ensuring that human contact, which breeds corruption in the seaports, airports and international land borders are eliminated to boost the campaign for 48-hour cargo clearance regime announced by the Federal Government.

    “About 90 per cent of goods are still subjected to physical examination as against use of the mobile and fixed scanners. A lot of deals devoid of transparency and integrity that are taking place at ports and international land borders must be addressed seriously by the government this year,” DrFarito said.

     

    NIMASA, security and CVFF disbursement

    Indigenous ship owners said they were sad because they had not accessed the Cabotage Vessel Finance Fund (CVFF). A member of the group, Mr Margret Orakuwsi  urged the Minister of Transport RotimiAmaechi to ensure that the money is disbursed this year to boost indigenous capacity id shipping.

    Other stakeholders said they were happy that the NIMASA Director-General Dr Dakuku Peteride brought the issue of the blue economy to the front burner. Maritime, they said, has become a key sector.

    “As an oil-producing and exporting country, as well as a consumer nation, the country is a large market for foreign goods owing to its population. Thus, the industry is key to growth.  To unlocking the potential in the sector this year, policies and programmes on blue economy by the Federal Government are vital. Although, NIMASA is  taken steps to reposition the maritime security landscape. The security of the waterways and the sea must be a key component of DrPeterside’s policy this year,” Alaka said.

    Cabotage Act, Alaka said, must be made to work in areas like the environment, lives and clean ocean.

     

    Shippers Council and intervention fund

    The Nigerian Shippers Council (NSC) needs the maximum support of the Federal and state governments to build the Truck Transit Park (TTPs) and the Inland Dry Ports (IDPs) across the country. The Council must continue with his laudable engagement of the terminal operators and other critical stakeholders to make the ports attractive and competitive.

    Its role as economic regulator transcends the position of the Federal Government on every issue relating to trade and commerce. “Shippers Council is the umpire between the government and the investors at ports. It is not biased and it must be seen to be faired to everybody this year to make the ports attractive and competitive in the sub region,”  Alaka said.

    Its Executive Secretary, Mr Hassan Bello, according to the operators, has what it takes to contribute meaningfully to reviewing the concession agreement and to carry out the reforms in our ports.

  • Maritime varsity bill tears presidency, lawmakers apart

    Maritime varsity bill tears presidency, lawmakers apart

    The federal government’s plan to upgrade the Maritime Academy of Nigeria, MAN, Oron, into a university may have hit a brick wall with the rejection of the Federal University of Maritime Studies, ( FUMS ) bill by the National Assembly.

    Findings by The Nation revealed that the proposal to upgrade MAN into a university has pitted several government agencies and lawmakers against each other with many of them working at cross-purposes such that admission into existing programmes for this year’s enrolment may be jeopardised.

    Investigation by our correspondent further revealed that the rejection of the bill by the lawmakers informed the setting up of an ad hoc technical committee with members drawn from the House of Representative Committee on Maritime Safety, Education and Administration, the Nigerian University Commission, NUC and the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, NIMASA.

    Informed sources confided in our correspondent that at the public hearing in Abuja, NIMASA reportedly kicked over the upgrade of MAN into a university, arguing matter-of-factly that MAN should maintain its current status as there was already a newly accredited Maritime University at Okerenkoko in Warri South, Delta state.

    NIMASA’s objection, informed sources further said, may have been fueled by the paucity of funds, a argument it has canvassed to show lack of interest by the Presidency to commit funds to two maritime universities under the present administration, which considers the ongoing ‘strong reforms agenda’ at the Academy as the first step to repositioning the institution towards achieving a reconnect with its lost mandate.

    Speaking in a telephone interview with our correspondent, Preye Kinsley, an alumnus of the Academy seems to share the same sentiments with NIMASA, noting that the Academy should focus on its core mandate of providing seafarers for the maritime sub-sector.

    NIMASA’s reluctance notwithstanding, members of the House Committee and some stakeholders including the government of Akwa Ibom state and various Oro nation socio-cultural and political unions have expressed support for the upgrade.

    Expectedly, this year’s admission was put on hold by the restructuring Committee in addition to delay in the resumption of National Diploma and Higher National Diploma students, as directed by the six-man Committee on the Restructuring and Repositioning of the Academy.

    The Nation was reliably informed that there is a committee working on the restructuring and repositioning of MAN, with a mandate to identify a number of concerns, one of which is the poor and unacceptable hostel accommodation for cadets amongst others.

    Our source, who is very well informed on developments at the Academy also told us that of the over 700 personnel in the staff roll, junior staff is only 100 and the rest senior cadre, “how do you explain that?” he asked.

    Our source revealed that personnel of the Academy, particularly the senior management level are on the same page with the reforms agenda and are cooperating with the Committee. He assured that the committee is composed of professionals who are beyond witch hunt or petty, personal agenda.

    Findings further revealed that ship owners have for a while become reluctant in recruiting MAN Oron graduates of nautical science, based on curriculum reservations and perceived poor teaching quality and lack of basic training facilities/equipment at the Academy.

    However, one time rector of MAN, Chief Nseyen Ebong agreed that quality has become a major challenge in the certification of cadets of the Academy, he debunked claims that products of the institution were unmarketable and uncompetitive. The former rector noted that cadets of the Academy are on top in academics and practical endeavors in many maritime institutions across the world.

    “I have said it many times before that some of our cadets excel and are leading in both academic and practical training exercises in most maritime academies in Europe, Asia and America. But when those in power begin to play politics with funding of the Academy, there has arisen a gradual fall in standards and quality, you cannot take that away as a natural consequence. So what we have at MAN today is the crime of political recklessness and arrogance,” he said.

  • Nigeria in global maritime map

    SIR: With the nation boasting of over 850 kilometers of coastline, it is a trite postulate that the Nigerian maritime industry is a gold mine that investors with foresight must take advantage of, for maximum profit.

    There are numerous incentives as income tax exemptions for infrastructural development in ship-building and there are financial incentives for ship-building and ship-scrapping with assurance of foreign repatriation of capital and profit.

    In its bid to reduce in bureaucratic red tapes impeding investment in the country, the presidential enabling business environment council approved a national action plan to be implemented across priority areas to enhance entry and exit of goods and services to spur inflow of foreign investment into Nigeria. There is also the National Trade Data Centre to promote investments in Nigeria. Further, the Nigerian Shippers Council (NSC) recently declared that the Kaduna Dry Port having been completed is set to commence operation.

    At the recent Offshore Technology Conference, OTC, in Houston Texas, chairman, Senate Committee on Marine Transport, Sani Yerima and the chairman House Committee on Maritime Safety, Education and Administration, Mohammed Umaru Bago assured that the legislature is committed to providing the legislative framework to enhance foreign investments in Nigeria. In keeping to this the Nigerian Senate has already passed the PIG Bill.

    It is also believed that with a more conducive investment climate, entailing amongst others, adequate security of maritime assets and elimination of corporate governance abuses, Nigeria, being the most populous country in Africa with about 183 million people will be able to take its place in world maritime map to enhance Nigeria’s per capital income and salvage the nation from the pangs of recession.

     

    Michael O. Ogunjobi Esq,

    Lagos.

  • Maritime expert hails NIMASA for removing maritime wrecks

    A player and stakeholder in the maritime industry, Dr. Chris Asoluka, has hailed the initiative by the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) to clear wrecks from the country’s maritime domain.

    Asoluka, a former chairman of Oil and Gas Free Zone Authority (OGFZA), who spoke in Lagos, noted that the efforts of the Dr. Dakuku Peterside-led management of NIMASA “to reposition the maritime sector is a development long overdue”.

    NIMASA’s Head of Corporate Communications Isichei Osamgbi, in a statement, quoted Asolukaas saying that the initiative should be pursued vigorously, confident that the process of wreck removal will have a positive impact on the global perception of Nigeria’s waters.

    According to the ex-Chairman of OGFZA, abandoned wrecks pose danger to navigation, lives and property on the nation’s territorial ways.

    He called on owners of abandoned wrecks to co-operate with the NIMASA management by removing them promptly to ensure a safe and secured maritime environment.

    Peterside had earlier stated that the agency is working closely with the Federal Ministry of Transportation to review the process of wreck removal on the nation’s territorial waterways, especially the ones on the channels.

    He noted that a marine notice was issued by the agency to that effect and anyone who refuses to comply with the notice will have his or her wrecks removed forcefully and may also face litigation.

    This, he added, is in line with the agency’s enabling Act and international protocol on wrecks removal.