Tag: Shippers’ Council

  • Oyetola inaugurates Shema, ten others into board of Nigerian Shippers’ Council 

    Oyetola inaugurates Shema, ten others into board of Nigerian Shippers’ Council 

    The Minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Dr Adegboyega Oyetola, on Monday inaugurated the governing board of the Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC).

    The Chairman of the board is the former Katsina State Governor, Ibrahim Shema.

    Other members of the Board include: Dr. Pius Akutah, Chief Emi Membere-Otaji, Chief John Aluya, Rt. Hon. Chiji Collins, Hon. Funmilayo Olasehinde, Engr. (Dr) Funmilola Rashidat Adeoti, Mele Kolo Giadem, Mrs Hafsatu Mohammed, Hon. Maharazu Adamu Dayi, and Mrs Uzoamaka Okereke.

    The Minister said the inauguration of the board represents the activation of institutional governance, the entrenchment of accountability, and the commencement of a renewed phase of purposeful oversight within our marine and blue economy sector.

    Oyetola said, “This decisive action underscores the administration’s commitment to good governance, institutional effectiveness, and the strategic repositioning of the Marine and Blue Economy as a driver of national transformation.”

    Oyetola disclosed that the Ministry is undertaking comprehensive reforms to reposition the sector as a vital pillar of economic growth and national development, with a focus on improving port efficiency and competitiveness, strengthening trade facilitation, and enhancing marine transportation.

    He said, “The Board of the Nigerian Shippers’ Council is expected to align fully with these priorities and provide the strategic oversight required to translate policy into measurable outcomes.

    “The Nigerian Shippers’ Council occupies a critical position as the designated Port Economic Regulator, entrusted with promoting efficiency, fairness, and transparency in port pricing, charges, and service delivery. The effective discharge of this mandate is essential to reducing the cost of doing business at our ports, facilitating trade, protecting the interests of shippers, and strengthening Nigeria’s competitiveness in regional and global commerce.

    “As members of this Board, you bear a solemn public trust. You are charged with providing policy guidance, strategic direction, and vigilant oversight in accordance with the law. Let me emphasise that while Management is responsible for day-to-day operations, the Board’s duty is to ensure that the Council remains faithful to its mandate, complies with government policies, and consistently delivers value to Nigerian shippers and to the national economy.” 

    He also charged members of the board to ensure that their meetings are purposeful.

    “Every meeting must be purposeful, every deliberation must lead to clear and actionable decisions, and every decision must advance efficiency, fairness, and competitiveness in the maritime sector. 

    “Your effectiveness will be measured not by the frequency of meetings held, but by the tangible impact of your decisions on trade facilitation, cost reduction, and national competitiveness.

    “As we inaugurate this Board today, we do so with confidence in your collective experience, professionalism, and dedication to national service. I urge you to justify the trust reposed in you by Mr. President and the Nigerian people through integrity, discipline, and demonstrable results.”

    The Minister while urging members of thr board to work in close harmony with the Management of the Council, stated, “You must be guided by professionalism, mutual respect, and a shared commitment to excellence in service delivery. There must be no distractions or conflicts that could hinder institutional performance. All deliberations, decisions, and actions of the Board must strictly conform with extant laws, government policies, rules, guidelines, and circulars.”

    Speaking on behalf of the members, Shema pledged that the board would discharge its responsibilities with diligence and integrity.

    He said the board would focus on strengthening regulatory oversight, embracing best practices, enhancing the use of technology, and supporting reforms aimed at improving trade facilitation and revenue generation in the maritime sector.

    “We assure you that this board will remain faithful to the mandate of the Nigerian Shippers’ Council and work to enhance efficiency, fairness and competitiveness in the sector, in line with existing laws and government policies.”

  • Shippers’ Council opts for alternative dispute resolutions

    Shippers’ Council opts for alternative dispute resolutions

    The Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) has saved maritime sector stakeholders over N10 billion in dispute resolution costs in the past two years while advancing 14 vehicle transit parks nationwide, as part of sweeping reforms to position Nigeria as Africa’s premier maritime hub under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

    Executive Secretary and Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC), Dr Pius Akutah, at a media parley, said that the council’s Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) mechanism handled between 300 and 400 cases this year alone, saving stakeholders more than N4 billion.

    This, he said, adds to the N6 billion saved in 2024, demonstrating the economic impact of efficient conflict management in a sector that accounts for over 80 percent of global trade.

    He said: “Last year, our interventions saved stakeholders over N6 billion in costs that would have been incurred had these disputes gone to court. This year, as at the last review, we have already saved more than N4 billion, and that figure has continued to grow”.

    The revelation comes as the Council identifies the Nigerian Port Economic Regulatory Agency Bill—currently awaiting presidential assent—as its most significant achievement in two years. The legislation, sponsored by Speaker Tajudeen Abbas, will replace the 1978 decree that has governed the sector for nearly five decades.

    The NSC is developing 14 vehicle transit parks at various stages of completion across Nigeria, strategically distributed to tackle driver fatigue-related accidents while creating economic hubs for the logistics sector. Dr Akutah explained that the initiative responds to observations that many fatal road accidents result from drivers traveling long hours without adequate rest.

    “One of the major issues is that we observed many road accidents are caused by driver fatigue. Drivers travel long hours without rest, leading to fatal accidents. To address this, we began promoting the establishment of Vehicle Transit Parks,” he stated.

    These facilities will serve dual purposes beyond rest stops. “They will also serve as economic hubs where drivers can relax, refresh, and secure their cargo. Rather than parking in unsafe roadside areas where goods can be stolen or damaged, drivers will have safe, secure, and well-equipped facilities,” the NSC chief added.

    The Council, he said, has ensured even geographical spread of the 14 parks, with mapping clearly showing their distribution across the country to maximise impact on the logistics value chain.

    Read Also: Shippers’ Council unveils reform framework

    On inland dry ports, Akutah revealed that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu pushed for completion of the nearly finished Funtua Inland Dry Port upon assuming office. Currently, operational dry ports, he said, are concentrated in the northwestern region—Kano, Kaduna, and Katsina—while the Council works with state governments to accelerate completion of others across the country.

    “Regarding inland dry ports, we have several legacy projects. When the President assumed office, he pushed for the completion of the nearly finished Funtua Inland Dry Port,” Akutah said, adding that these facilities will support transit cargo movement from hinterlands to seaports and bring shipping services closer to shippers nationwide.

    In Borno State, according to him, a privately developed inland dry port is being fast-tracked for commissioning during the second half of President Tinubu’s tenure.

    “We are now engaging stakeholders to fast-track its completion so it can be commissioned during the second half of the President’s tenure. The Governor of Borno State is particularly committed to achieving this,” the ES disclosed.

    He commended the administration for completing the Lagos-Kano rail corridor while expressing optimism about the eastern rail line development. He emphasised that despite being capital-intensive, rail infrastructure remains the cheapest and safest means of moving cargo across Nigeria.

    “Rail infrastructure is capital-intensive, but it remains the cheapest and safest means of moving cargo across the country. Once fully optimised, these systems will significantly ease the movement of cargo for shippers and enhance overall national logistics efficiency,” he explained.

    According to him, the NSC has established Border Information Centres (BICs) to capture substantial informal trade occurring in border communities, addressing a critical gap in Nigeria’s national trade database. He noted that many border communities interact as though within a single country, conducting significant trade that historically went unrecorded.

    “Many of our border communities live directly along the border lines, yet they interact as though they are within a single country. They trade freely among themselves, and while much of this trade is informal, it is still significant. If we fail to capture these activities, our national trade database will remain incomplete,” he said.

    The centres, Akutah said, monitor informal trade activities at crossing points, document transactions, and promote formalisation processes. “Their purpose is to monitor the informal trade activities taking place in border towns and crossing points, document them, and ultimately promote processes that will formalise these activities,” he explained.

    Beyond data collection, Akutah said the BICs serve as platforms for engaging neighboring countries on smuggling issues, ensuring legitimate trade while protecting the economy from illicit activities.

    He candidly acknowledged Nigeria’s strategic error in delaying signature of the AfCFTA agreement, resulting in lost opportunities that should naturally have belonged to Africa’s largest economy.

    “First, I must admit that Nigeria made a mistake by not signing the agreement immediately when it was negotiated. Nigeria was an active part of the negotiation process, and it all began in Abuja. We should have signed at the same time others were signing, so we could take advantage of the opportunities available at the onset,” he stated.

    The delay, he noted, cost the country the AfCFTA secretariat, now hosted in Ghana, along with the Secretary General position and several strategic roles that Nigerians could have secured. “Because we delayed, we lost many key opportunities to the secretariat in Ghana, opportunities that should naturally have been ours. Nigeria ought to have hosted the secretariat, but that chance is gone,” Dr Akutah lamented.

    However, he emphasised that Nigeria must now focus on maximising benefits within the agreement, with connectivity emerging as an immediate priority. “Nigeria must work towards becoming a maritime hub not just for West Africa but for the entire continent, so we can ease the connectivity challenges across Africa, which remain a major obstacle to intra-African trade,” he declared.

    According to Akutah, yhe NSC has developed two comprehensive maps, one covering the entire African continent, highlighting critical maritime infrastructure distribution linked to logistics. He identified maritime logistics as one of AfCFTA’s biggest challenges, citing inefficient vessel routing as a major obstacle.

    “Under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), it is evident that one of the biggest challenges will be maritime logistics. Connecting African countries remains extremely difficult. For example, a vessel carrying cargo from Nigeria to Ghana may first go to Europe before returning to Ghana. This is inefficient and time-consuming, underscoring the urgent need for proper African connectivity,” he explained.

    The fundamental problem, according to Akutah, lies in vessel ownership. “A key challenge is that most African countries are not ship-owning nations. They lease vessels, and these vessels operate on predetermined routes that cannot easily be altered to create direct African shipping lanes. That is the crux of the problem,” he noted.

    The Council examined logistics supporting infrastructure and concluded it must promote development of inland dry ports, transit parks, border facilities, and similar structures to address these gaps.

    Akutah reported high compliance rates with regulatory mandates, attributing this success to transparent stakeholder communication and the sector’s maturity. He noted that investors who have committed substantial capital naturally seek regulatory certainty.

    “Stakeholders in this sector have invested significantly, many of them committing very substantial capital and naturally, they want to recoup their investments and make profits. No investor wants to operate in a sector clouded by uncertainty or inefficiencies that could hinder the smooth running of operations or delay returns on investment,” he said.

    “Any regulatory mandate that has been properly communicated to stakeholders has been met with cooperation. For the modest reforms introduced, we have received tremendous support, and many stakeholders have openly aligned themselves with these reforms because they understand that a better, more efficient sector benefits everyone,” he added.

    The voluntary registration of service providers demonstrated this compliance culture. “When we commenced the registration of service providers across the sector, a large number voluntarily came forward to register without coercion or the need for heavy enforcement,” he revealed.

    The NSC’s Compliance Unit has become a preferred platform for resolving maritime conflicts, with Akutah emphasising the Council’s strong promotion of ADR to avoid costly litigation.

    “These disputes are often extremely costly to resolve, especially when they end up in court. The delays associated with litigation lead to demurrage and other financial implications that we are keen to avoid,” he explained.

    “This is why, as a Council, we strongly promote alternative dispute resolution (ADR). Our Compliance Unit is specifically mandated to handle maritime conflicts promptly, so they do not escalate into lengthy court cases that waste investors’ time and erode the value of their investments,” Akutah said.

    The unit’s effectiveness, he underscored, has attracted direct stakeholder engagement. “The unit has become a dependable platform, and many stakeholders now approach us directly to help resolve their disputes. Most of these cases are settled amicably, allowing the parties involved to return to their businesses and even continue their partnerships seamlessly,” he noted.

    Akutah identified the Nigerian Port Economic Regulatory Agency Bill as the Council’s most significant achievement in two years. The legislation, which has passed both chambers of the National Assembly, is undergoing final refinements by the National Assembly after vetting by the Attorney-General’s Office before proceeding to the President for assent.

    “Two years have indeed come and gone, and within that period, a great deal has happened in the Council. I will highlight the most significant achievement we have recorded, which is the Nigerian Port Economic Regulatory Agency Bill,” Akutah stated.

    The bill will replace the 1978 decree, now codified as CAP N133 LFN 2004. “This development is particularly important because the Council has long operated under a 1978 decree, now codified as CAP N133 LFN 2004. The Nigerian Shippers’ Council Act is an outdated law that no longer reflects the realities or reform direction of the maritime sector under the administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu,” he explained.

    Akutah reiterated that Nigeria, as Africa’s most populous nation, faces mounting expectations to lead continental maritime infrastructure development, even as other African nations advance their capabilities.

    “As the most populous nation on the continent, Nigeria remains a country that the rest of Africa looks up to, even though it is not waiting for us. Several African nations are already making deliberate efforts to develop their maritime infrastructure, especially in the area of logistics,” he observed.

    “Nigeria is not entirely behind, but we are behind to an extent, particularly because Africa expects us to take the lead in developing logistics infrastructure,” Akutah added, calling for urgent action to strengthen institutions and establish proper legal frameworks.

    “Many countries are building their economies around this sector. They are investing heavily in infrastructure, strengthening institutions and granting them the authority needed to compete with similar institutions globally. We cannot afford to delay. We must build our institutions, strengthen them and establish proper legal frameworks,” he concluded.

    With the regulatory bill awaiting presidential assent and infrastructure projects advancing nationwide, the NSC’s reforms, industry players say, signals the country’s determination to reclaim leadership in African maritime logistics and maximise benefits under the continental free trade framework.

  • Shippers’ Council launches ECMS to curb delays, inefficiencies in manual workflows 

    Shippers’ Council launches ECMS to curb delays, inefficiencies in manual workflows 

    The Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) has launched Enterprise Content Management System (ECMS) to curb inefficiencies, delays, and opacity associated with paper-based processes and manual workflows.

    The Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Sen. George Akume, described the ECMS as a model for modernising public administration across Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) in the country.

    Speaking at the launch of the system in Abuja on Tuesday, Akume noted that the milestone by the NSC signals the government’s commitment to eliminating outdated manual processes and replacing them with efficient, technology-driven systems that support accountability and transparency. 

    He said, “The ECMS is not an external-facing service platform. Rather, it is a sophisticated internal tool designed to eliminate the inefficiencies, delays, and opacity that often accompany paper-based processes and manual workflows.

    “By strengthening internal coordination, documentation integrity, and operational transparency, the system will greatly enhance the Council’s overall regulatory effectiveness and the quality of service ultimately delivered to stakeholders.

    “The system’s audit trails, secure approval processes, workflow automation, and centralised document repository reflect global best practices. These features will ensure greater accountability, reduce discretionary bottlenecks, and enable the Council to respond to industry challenges with speed and precision”.

    Akume commended the Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Shippers’ Council, Dr. Pius Akutah, for complying with President Bola Tinubu’s directive on digital records management across the public service. 

    The SGF, while stating that the initiative contributes directly to the Ease of Doing Business reforms and to the broader strategy of modernising government operations, encouraged other MDAs to study the NSC’s implementation journey and deploy similar systems to strengthen their internal administrative capabilities.

    The Minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Adegboyega Oyetola, said the newly launched initiative will eliminate paper-based processes, reduce manual handling, and minimise bureaucratic bottlenecks.

    He said: “The ECMS will strengthen institutional efficiency and enable the Council to deliver predictable, transparent, and high-quality regulatory services. It represents a decisive shift towards a more agile, accountable, and technology-enabled organisation.

    “With automated workflows, secure approvals, centralised information management, and real-time task tracking, the ECMS will significantly reduce turnaround times and ensure that the Council’s interventions are timely and professionally executed”.

    He commended NSC for complying with the Presidential directive mandating all MDAs to transition to digital records management by 31st December 2025.

    The Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Mrs. Didi Esther Walson-Jack, said Nigeria must align with global best practices to remain relevant in the blue economy space. 

    She commended NSC for being the first agency to comply with the presidential directive of going paperless by launching ECMS in the ministry, and the only agency that had invited her to the launch of ECMS.

    She described NSC as the apex regulatory body that protects the interests of shippers, ensures efficient and effective maritime trade, and monitors port operations, across the Nigerian marine and blue economy space.

    “By coordinating the shipping industry and ensuring compliance with regulatory frameworks, the council contributes significantly to national trade facilitation, economic growth, and revenue optimisation”. 

    The Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Shippers’ Council, Dr. Pius Akutah, described the ECMS as an internal workflow and records management tool designed to eliminate manual file movement and bureaucratic bottlenecks that hamper public institutions.

    He said: “The system provides automated workflows, secure digital approvals, a unified archive of documents, and real-time performance dashboards. These features will ensure that tasks are executed promptly, responsibilities are clearly tracked, and information is safeguarded and easily accessible”.

    He noted that the launch was in response to the Presidential directive and the Head of Service’s mandate for all MDAs to fully digitise administrative operations by the end of 2025. 

    END

  • Shippers’ Council urges owners of Lekki Port to adopt tech innovation

    Shippers’ Council urges owners of Lekki Port to adopt tech innovation

    The Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) has called for the Lekki Deep Sea Port to adopt advanced technological innovations to enhance its competitiveness.

    This call was made by the NSC’s Executive Secretary and Chief Executive Officer, Dr. Akutah Pius, during a meeting with the Lekki Port management team at the NSC headquarters.

    In his address, Akutah described the Lekki Port as a modern, world-class facility that should set the standard for excellence in shipping operations in Nigeria and the region.

    He reaffirmed the NSC’s commitment to promoting investment predictability and ensuring the long-term sustainability and profitability of investments in the sector.

    The Managing Director of Lekki Port, Wang Qiang, highlighted the port’s status as a Public Private Partnership (PPP) project, emphasising the need for investor collaboration to drive its sustainability.

    He requested the NSC’s intervention in reviewing the port’s tariffs, citing significant expenditure demands.

    Read Also: Shippers’ council launches online registration portal to boost maritime efficiency

    Qiang also expressed the port’s commitment to investing in infrastructure, attracting investors, and achieving transhipment, aligning with the Renewed Hope Agenda’s objectives.

    The meeting explored areas of collaboration, with both parties seeking to enhance the competitiveness and efficiency of the nation’s maritime industry.

  • Shippers’ council launches online registration portal to boost maritime efficiency

    Shippers’ council launches online registration portal to boost maritime efficiency

    The Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) has launched a new online platform for the registration of regulated port service providers and users, aimed at enhancing efficiency, transparency, and compliance in the maritime industry.

    The digital portal, unveiled during a stakeholders’ sensitization forum in Kaduna on Tuesday, enables users to complete the entire registration process remotely, eliminating the need for physical visits to the Council’s offices.

    Speaking at the event, the Executive Secretary and CEO of the Council, Barr. Pius Akutah, described the initiative as a significant step forward in the Council’s ongoing digital transformation agenda.

    “This sensitization programme on the Online Portal for the Registration of Regulated Port Service Providers and Users is a critical part of our mandate,” he said.

    Represented by the Deputy Director Stakeholders Engagement, Mrs Adaba Hannah, the Executive Secretary said “as the Port Economic Regulator, the Nigerian Shippers’ Council remains committed to enhancing efficiency, transparency, and compliance in the port and shipping sector. The launch of this registration portal is a bold step towards achieving that goal.”

    He noted that the online registration is backed by Part II, Section 4(1) of the Port Economic Regulation 2015, which makes the registration mandatory for all regulated entities in the sector.

    The Executive Secretary went on saying, “stakeholders can seamlessly register their companies online without the need for physical visits to any NSC office, provided that the necessary documentation and payments are submitted.”

    He also highlighted that the registration process aligns with the Council’s broader objectives of reducing bureaucracy and promoting the ease of doing business.

    “This automation aligns with our broader agenda to eliminate bottlenecks, reduce bureaucracy, and promote ease of doing business in Nigeria’s maritime sector,” he said.

    The Executive Secretary further said the initiative is linked to the implementation of the International Cargo Tracking Note (ICTN).

    “The ICTN is a strategic initiative that enhances cargo visibility, improves revenue assurance, combats under-declaration, and strengthens national security in trade operations. The registration of port service providers and users is therefore a necessary component of this initiative,” he said.

    Also speaking, the Director of the North West Zonal Directorate of the NSC, Alhaji Ahmed Umar Yazah, welcomed participants and reiterated the Council’s role in protecting the interests of shippers across all transport modes.

    “It gives me great pleasure to be with you and to formally welcome you to this stakeholder sensitisation programme,” Yazah said. “Your presence here today gives us hope and motivation to continue working towards discharging the Council’s mandate.”

    He noted that the NSC has been instrumental in resolving disputes and improving operational efficiency in the sector.

    “The interest you have shown in our programmes nationwide has manifested in our efforts toward improved efficiency in port operations, reduced unnecessary delays faced by shippers at the ports, and a decrease in unwholesome practices by some stakeholders. This has led to the recovery of over N6 billion for individuals and corporate shippers in Nigeria,” he said.

    Read Also: My plans for Shippers’ Council, Maritime sector, by Jime

    Yazah urged participants to take full advantage of the sensitisation programme, describing it as “an opportunity to understand how to register regulated service providers and users of shipping services in Nigeria.”

    He also said, “It is through this registration that detailed information about shippers will be captured, processed, and used for seamless interaction and engagement.”

    While encouraging feedback, he added: “We operate an open-door policy. We welcome suggestions and even criticisms on how to improve our regulatory services and foster stronger working relationships with you.”

    The event however featured technical presentations on how to access the portal, complete the registration process, and understand the benefits of compliance. It drew participants from various sectors including the Nigeria Customs Service, the Kaduna State Ministry of Innovation, Trade and Investment, the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC), freight forwarding associations, commodity groups, and members of the Kaduna State Shippers’ Association.

  • Shippers Council unveils standard for trucks

    The Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) has unveiled the Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) to regulate the haulage industry.

    Its Executive Secretary, Mr.  Hassan Bello, said the SOP is to sanitise the haulage Industry which has become an all-comers’ affair without regard for standard and ethics in the business

    “We are going to have conditions for operating a haulage company. We are going to have a minimum of six trucks for a company, companies have a registered office, have insurance for goods on transit, have a tracking device, among others.

    “Any company that does not have the capacity to own six trucks will not be allowed to operate. Its implementation will be gradually done.

    “Even now, there are some good trucking companies, but we need to have more of them. Nigeria is going to have a lot of project cargo in import and export but we need the trucking system to be organised.

    “We are expecting that in three years time, everything would have taken shape. Besides, the trucks are going to have competition from the rail. For now, to take a truck from Lagos to Yola, it costs N1million. By rail will give you may be N300,000.

    “However, haulage is important to the economy. Germany with all its sophistication, 30 per cent of their carriage is by trucks. So when we have the roads done we are going to re-fleet the trucks. We are going to have conditions for operating a haulage company,” Bello said.

    But the Secretary of National Association of Road Transport Owners (NARTO), Mr Aloga Ogbogo the government regulation must be holistic.

    “We should look at the issue of training and re-training of drivers, granting of financial assistance to the operators, and transportation should not be an all-comers’ affair. Again, we are talking of regulation when we don’t have a standard truck park. The only space we have has been sold to a company.

    “The government is not even playing its role as a regulator. For instance, look at Apapa port access roads. The government licensed 63 tank farms and each has the capacity to take 200 trucks. Before granting the licence there should have been a condition for the provision of a holding bay for each of them,” Bello said.

  • Shippers Council to stop ‘arbitrary port charges’

    The Nigeria Shippers’ Council (NSC) is determined to stop arbitrary charges to make the ports attractive for business, The Nation has learnt.

    The NSC, sources said, was determined to resolve the problem caused by the concessioning of the seaports to private investors about 13 years ago.

    The council was taken to court by terminal operators and shipping companies after the government named it as the port economic regulator. The case is yet to be determined by the Supreme Court.

    A senior official of the Federal Ministry of Transport (FMoT) said the council and the ministry were resolute to achieve efficiency at the seaports.

    The source said the era of imposing arbitrary charges was over.

    The council, it was learnt, is worried that the operators are not increasing charges without following due process. Part of the agreement, the source said, was to call a stakeholders’meeting during which such charges would be discussed and approved before implementation.

    The operators and shipping firms, the official alleged, introduced new charges in the past without calling such a meeting.

    “These people went to court to challenge the appointment of the NSC as the port economic regulator. Despite the fact that the appointment of the NSC has been gazetted, they are still claiming that there is no law backing its appointment.

    “But they have forgotten that the agreement they signed with the ‘NPA was a mere agreement that has no single law of the federation backing it up and they have operated the port now for almost 13 years, without being gazetted not to talk of the law of the National Assembly.

    “It was this that prompted the agitation for the appointment of a commercial regulator to oversee the activities of stakeholders, including providers and receivers of shipping services. The freight forwarders had on many occasions gone on strike to protest the action of the service providers in increasing charges and for other deplorable conditions in the system. They had argued that this was so because there was no regulator to check the activities of the terminal operators and shipping companies, most of whom are sister companies of the terminal operators. It was based on this problem that stakeholders applauded the Federal Government when it approved the Shippers’ Council as the economic regulator,” the official said.

    Some stakeholders said it was time the government reformed the maritime sector, and reviewed it’s agreement with the operators.

    The  Chairman, Ports Consultative Council, Otunba Kunle Folarin, said: “If the port industry truly deserves to be productive, competitive, and earn a hub status in the region, it must reform and stop deluding itself.

    ”The colossal growth in traffic, environment and empowerment, which we deserve,will forever elude the country unless the entire industry is reformed to meet the performance level of the ports in the sub-region now husbanding Nigeria destination cargo traffic.

    “There is much more to do to achieve the objectives of unbundling and creating efficient and competitive ports environment.

    “The reforms must start now in an all-inclusive way; it must be total. That is the only way, and that is the way forward,” he said.

    Folarin, who was not happy with the situation of the port, said a typical shipping company’s debit note in Nigeria contained at least nine different elements of charges.

    These include: shipping line charges, container cleaning, container deposit, Maritime Organisation of West and Central Africa (MOWCA) charge, Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) sea protection levy, MOWCA fee, freight levy, document release, demurrage charges, NIPOST stamp tax, and Value Added Tax.

    Currently, eight of these charges have generated dispute between the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), and the shipping companies, while four are a source of disaffection among importers, exporters and the terminal freight forwarders.

    Also, another four charges are being contested among shipping companies, importers, exporters and freight forwarders.

    Ports cost is a collective responsibility for both government and the private sector.

    Total port cost per a given cargo unit include Customs duty/taxes – 70 per cent, and Ports Terminal Operators – 13 per cent. The Nigerian Ports Authority’s share is negligible (+/-1%) excluding Customs duties, and comprises costs of handling, storage and delivery.

    To address the problem, Folarin said there was a need for deliberate government policy to reduce Customs duty and taxes; set up an effective and efficient single window platform; regulate infrastructure development especially in the port environment and common users’ areas.

    He emphasised the need for a stakeholders’dialogue, and encourage Public-Private Partnership in ports business, invest in modern facilities, and provide good quality human resources.

    The Executive Vice Chairman, Sifax Group, Taiwo Afolabi, said: “We are convinced that these are matters of immediate and practical concerns to every Nigerian, and more so to the regulatory authorities that need to harmonise and balance the conflicting viewpoints to the satisfaction of the stakeholders.

    “I recall as an industry player that the exchange rate (Naira to dollar) in Year 2016, for instance, when we became ports concessionaires was between N125 and N131 to a dollar. How much is the exchange rate today?

    “In other words, since many of the operations are expected to be discharged to the lessee in dollars, how much naira will be enough today to purchase the required dollars.

    “Thirteen  whole years after the historic concession, how do you generate that amount of naira in today’s national economy?

    “By what percentage will the cost of service be adjusted upward to reflect the astronomical changes in the foreign exchange regime? So many questions seeking answers,” he said.

    Chairman, Seaport Terminal Operators Associations of Nigeria (STOAN), Princess Vicky Haastrup said the operators were not to blame for the astronomical increase.

    “Some people are putting all the blames on terminal operators and I feel very disappointed.

    “The truth is that leadership is the problem. The government is the problem. I am not talking of this present leadership, the whole thing started from time immemorial. There was no sincerity on the part of government itself.

    “If you look at what is happening in Apapa today, there is no enabling environment.

    “The operators are losing money. We have invested heavily and what do we get back in return?

    “When we took over, dollar was N125, and today it is N362.

    ‘’NPA is there, Shippers’ Council is also there. What NIMASA charges is one of the highest in the world. Policy summersaults everywhere.

    ‘’Do we sit well and think deeply before changing policies?

    “There are whole lots of government agencies in the ports with a lot of charges, even stamps.

    ‘’You will see the government going around talking about Ease of Doing Business, are we supporting him? Is government supporting itself?

    ‘’Ports should be a one-stop shop, but I am sorry we are far from it because there is no sincerity on the part of anyone,” she said.

    Bello expressed optimism that the council would deliver on its mandate.

    The council, Bello said, was determined to meet the expectations of Nigerians in terms of port operation, efficiency and port charges.

    He assured genuine importers that irregularities and arbitrariness in the ports system would be addressed.

    The NSC, he assured, would look into the high cost of doing business at the ports, and what was responsible for the diversion of goods meant for ports to neighbouring ports of Cotonou.

    The immediate past President, Association of Nigerian Customs Licensed Agents (ANLCA), Prince Olayiwola Shittu, urged the council to review charges imposed on importers.

    Shittu noted that numerous charges were being imposed arbitrarily without due consultations among stakeholders, while soliciting for appropriate consideration for the importers/exporters whom are the basis for shipping because they generate cargoes.

  • Shippers Council hails Appeal Court’s verdict

    The Nigerian Shippers Council (NSC) is committed to ensuring efficiency at the ports so that they can compete with  those in neighbouring countries, its Executive Secretary, Hassan Bello, has said.

    Hailing last week’s Court of Appeal’s verdict which upheld the Council’s power as port regulator, Bello said approved charges and port services’ automation were necessary to drive the reform needed in the sector to attract more cargoes.

    He said ports’automation and the establishment of the Truck Transit Parks would enhance efficiency, adding that transparency would facilitate cargo clearance.

    “The judgment given last week by the Court of Appeal sitting in Lagos was commendable. It will stop arbitrary charges and promote business in our ports.

    “The automation of port processes is also necessary. If it is five days in port A and it is one day in port B, I will rather go to port B because it is the economies of scale that determine which port is used. We have made it possible for us to make that comparison within the sub-consciousness of the national discourse on the economy.

    “It is important for our ports to be efficient and our ports are picking up now. Corruption is what we have been talking about and there are many ways to kill corruption and one of them is automation because the moment you have automation, corruption will just disappear. With the introduction of their electronic payment platform, what took place in six days then, now takes place in six seconds.

    “Some of the delays have been eliminated by NPA and the agency is also trying to introduce other electronic system of doing things, the same thing with Customs,’’ Bello said.

    The NSC boss urged the government to take a deliberate action to address many challenges confronting the port system through consistent and predictable policies.

    He said investors needed certainty and ease of doing business which could be brought about by government’s intervention, especially in the gridlock at Apapa.

    According to him, no matter how efficient a terminal is, if there is no road to evacuate cargoes, how can you do it. So, there must be some level of intervention.

    “The ideas are to have an electronic passage to ensure that a truck is only in Apapa when it is needed to pick or drop cargo. Then the thank farms, we don’t need trailers tanker to go to tank farms because we have the pipeline which is also a means of transportation.

    “The moment we have these pipelines pumping to Mosimi and other flow stations, then we don’t need tankers in Apapa.

    “We cannot rely only on one access like road; port should be accessible by road, rail, inland water ways and pipelines because the port is not a storage place for cargo at all,’’ he said.

    Bello also said the NSC, in partnership with state governments,  would build Truck Transit Parks on major highways to address the challenge of trucks parking on the roads. He said the project, a  Public-Private Partnership (PPP), aimed at reducing road congestion and loss of cargoes.

    He said the parks would have hotels, restaurants, petrol stations and garrage for vehicles’ repair and maintenance.

     

  • ‘Shippers Council is ports economic regulator’

    • Court orders terminal operators to refund N1tr

    The Court of Appeal in Lagos has dismissed an appeal by the Seaport Terminal Operators Association of Nigeria (STOAN) against the Nigerian Shippers Council (NSC).

    It affirmed the Council’s powers to fix shipping charges.

    The appellate court, in the lead judgment by Justice C.N Uwa, upheld the judgment of Justice Ibrahim Buba of the Federal High Court in Lagos and all the reliefs granted in the defendants’ favour.

    The defendants (respondents) are the NSC and the Registered Trustees of Shippers Association, Lagos State.

    The plaintiffs (terminal operators) had prayed the court to hold that their activities are governed by the lease agreements they entered into with the Federal Government through the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), and the Bureau of Public Enterprises as confirming party.

    They urged the court to hold that the NSC Act of 2004 does not govern, or regulate their activities, and that the NSC does not have any power under the Local Shipping Charges on imports and exports regulations to assume the role of port regulators, nor can it impose charges, or stipulate any directives on them.

    Dismissing the plaintiffs’ case, Justice Buba, in November 2015, affirmed NSC’s appointment as the economic regulator for the Seaports in Nigeria and its powers to impose charges.

    The Judge held that the Shipping Line Agency Charges (SLAC) levied and collected from Nigerian shippers by the shipping companies since 2006, was illegal.

    He said the shipping companies should account for and pay to NSC all monies or fees charged and collected since 2006 as SLAC, which is estimated to be above N1trillion.

    The judge delivered judgment in two suits filed by some shipping companies and terminal operators (Alraine Shipping Agencies Nigeria Limited and others, and Apapa Bulk Terminal Limited and others), challenging the NSC’s power to fix certain shipping charges.

    Following its appointment as the economic regulator of the Nigerian ports by the Federal Government in February 2014, NSC issued notices to both the shipping companies and terminal operators to reverse all illegal charges levied on shippers.

    Dissatisfied, the shipping companies and the terminal operators, mostly foreign owned, filed the suits to invalidate NSC’s actions.

    NSC, represented by Dr Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), objected to the suits and made a counter claim.

    It sought a declaration that by virtue of the provisions of Clause 2(a) and (b) of the Memorandum of Understanding of March 28, 2001 between providers and users of shipping/port and related services, the plaintiffs do not have the powers to unilaterally introduce and impose SLAC.

    The NSC also sought a declaration that the collection of charges from shippers, or users of shipping/port-related services from 2006, was illegal, ultra vires, and therefore null and void.

    It was learnt that based on Tuesday’s Appeal Court judgment, shippers that have paid SLAC to the shipping companies beginning from 2006 when the ports were concessioned to them, are entitled to a refund.

     

  • ICRC to collaborate with Shippers’ Council to fund dry ports’ projects

    ICRC to collaborate with Shippers’ Council to fund dry ports’ projects

    The Infrastructure Concession and Regulatory Commission (ICRC) is to collaborate with the Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) to make Inland Dry Ports (IDPs) bankable and be attractive to more concessionaires.

    The Acting Director-General of ICRC, Mr Chidi Izuwah, said this in a publication of the Council entitled “The Shipper’’, made available to reporters in Lagos yesterday.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that there are six (6) approved locations for the Inland Container Depots (ICDs) / Container Freight Stations (CFSs), which had been concessioned to private sector operators by the Federal Ministry of Transportation.

    The six ICDs are: Isiala Ngwa in Aba, Erunmu Ibadan, Heipang in Jos, Zawachiki in Kano, Zamfarawa, in Funtua and Jauri in Maiduguri.

    Izuwah said if the IDP was bankable, it would attract the right level of financing from lenders and make them viable.

    He said that both the council and the Federal Ministry of Transportation were determined to make the IDP project successful.

    According to him, IDPs are included in the National Economic Recovery and Growth Plan because the fastest way to increase such capacity in any country is to build dry ports.

    “The IDPs will build industries around them because it is about transport and those area they are located will develop and grow our Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    “The government is working very hard. We have to face the reality, building a rail is expensive and takes time.

    “The existing narrow gauge lines transverse our country very well and government is in the process of concessioning that narrow gauge lines to General Electric to provide freight services.,’’ he said.

    According to him, presently many of the IDPs are located near the rail lines, so it is just to put a siding.

    “The one in Isiala Ngwa, Kaduna and Jos are near the rail and the next thing is to provide people who can operate the system,’’ he said.

    Izuwah, who said many people had good intentions, added that they were not able to appreciate what they needed to do in terms of preparation to develop the IDP project.

    He said the feasibility studies for the licensed IDPs were not properly done, stressing that there was no proper due diligence in terms of the promoters.

    According to him, for one to have a dry port, one needs to have good connectivity between the ports and the IDPs.

    “In Malaysia and in the Far East, they use IDPs in a standard process. The only thing they do at the ports is vessel handling. They do not clear goods at the ports, the container will just leave the vessel on the land and the vessel will go away and they move the containers to the IDPs.

    “It is at the IDPs that the owner of the consignments will do Customs formalities and clear the goods. Also the Inland Dry Ports are points of origin and destination,” Izuwah said.

    According to him, some of the processes required for establishing IDPs were not done properly; that was why the ICRC wanted to work with the Shippers’ Council to plug those gaps and make them bankable.

    NSC is saddled with the establishment of Inland Container Depots (ICDs) or IDPs under the Public Private Partnership (PPP) initiative in the country.