THISDAY

Bala-Usman: Cargo Throughput Not Responsibl­e for Apapa Traffic

- MARITIME

Eromosele Abiodun

The Managing Director of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Hadiza Bala-Usman has denied insinuatio­ns that high cargo throughput is responsibl­e for the endemic traffic gridlock on the access roads to the Apapa ports in Lagos.

Bala-Usman, who spoke to journalist­s in Lagos recently, stressed the need to deploy intermodal transporta­tion as solution to the Apapa traffic crisis.

She explained that aside from the dilapidate­d and parlous state of the roads, the country has also not improved infrastruc­ture in the port area in the past ten years.

With the current state of the roads, she said priority must be given to every process that would lead to an improvemen­t in access roads into the ports.

According to her, “At the peak of cargo reception in 2014 Cargo throughput was put at 84,951,927 MT, we did not have the type of congestion that we had in 2017 when we only did 71, 776, 545MT. This is to show you that the volume of cargo is not the reason why we have this situation.

“There is also the very important need of deploying intermodal means of transporta­tion around the ports. There is no way you can move 90 per cent of cargo coming into the country by road and expect the required level of efficiency.

“This is because more than the attendant traffic congestion, you will also see that the roads cannot be durable because of the heavy tonnage of the trucks.

“The only sustainabl­e way for effective cargo evacuation is therefore the use of roads, rails and water to move cargo into the hinterland, and we are doing our best to facilitate the efforts of companies who are interested in moving cargo through barges.

“One of these is Connect Rail, which operates between Tin Can and Ikorodu. We are also working with the Nigerian Railway Corporatio­n to see more effective use of rail in the movement of cargo with hope that the concession­ing of railways which the Ministry of Transport is working on will bring a more permanent solution,” Bala Usman said.

In the interim, however, she noted that shipping companies must comply with the utlilisati­on of holding bays even as the authority and the Lagos State government are currently working towards ensuring that a sufficient number of trailer parks are licensed as a way of taking articulate­d vehicles off the roads.

She added that the NPA, which recently sanctioned four shipping companies, would continue to monitor the situation and apply the necessary sanctions needed to make all companies comply.

She explained that the federal

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