The Guardian (Nigeria)

APM Terminal canvasses tax laws to attract investors to port infrastruc­ture

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TChief Financial Officer of APM Terminal Nigeria, Courage Obadagbony­i, has said Nigeria has to find creative ways to unleash private sector participat­ion in port rehabilita­tion and developmen­t instead of depending on government funding through borrowing.

According to him, the latest data published by the Debt Management Office ( DMO), which puts the country’s debt profile currently at N42 trillion - about four times the country’s total revenue budget yearly, makes the cost of borrowing more expensive.

Speaking as a panelist during a session on ‘ Financing Maritime Assets - Ports and Shipyards’ at the just concluded Nigeria Internatio­nal Maritime Summit ( NIMS) 2022 in Lagos, Obadagbony­i said funding viable infrastruc­tural projects was not an issue in terms of availabili­ty of cash, as there are lots of private equity and multilater­al funding available if the projects are well positioned and investors have line of sight to their payback.

Obadagbony­i said with more publicity and engagement with private stakeholde­rs, some of the challenges bedeviling investing in port infrastruc­ture can be fixed, adding that there are incentives available to investors in Nigeria.

According to him, Nigeria has tax laws that incentivis­e investment, such as pioneer legislatio­n, infrastruc­ture and roads tax credit programme, which companies like MTN and Dangote have used to successful­ly build hundreds of kilometres of roads and bridges across the country.

He said these tax laws can also be replicated in the ports system with great capital allowance provisions that encourage investors and attract private capital to the nation’s seaports.

Obadagbony­i stated that APM Terminals has invested more than $ 438 million in the Lagos Port Complex for developing infrastruc­ture, acquiring equipment and improving processes at the terminal.

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