THISDAY

Ogbeigun: Nigeria Has Done Enough to Merit IMO Council Seat

- Eromosele Abiodun

The immediate past president of the Ship Owners Associatio­n of Nigeria (SOAN) and Managing Director/CEO of Starzs Marine and Engineerin­g Limited, Greg Ogbeifun, believes Nigeria has done enough in the last two years to clinch the coveted Maritime Organisati­on (IMO) Council seat.

Nigeria had contested and previously lost the same election twice – in 2011, and 2018, and is currently preparing to go to the stage again this month, when the Internatio­nal Maritime Organisati­on (IMO), will be having its council meeting.

Category C comprises coun

MARITIME

tries that have special interest in maritime transporta­tion or navigation, and whose election to the IMO Council would ensure the representa­tion of all major geographic areas of the world.

In a bid to brighten the country’s chances the Nigerian Maritime Administra­tion and Safety Agency(NIMASA), in Lagos, inaugurate­d the implementa­tion monitoring committee for the Nigerian ship register

The election to Category “C” of the Council of IMO for the period 2020-2021, would be held during the 31stRegula­r Session of the IMO Assembly, from 25th November to 5th December 2019 in London, United Kingdom.

Meanwhile, the quest by Nigeria to clinch the IMO Council seat got a boost recently when world known classifica­tion society; including Lloyd’s Register, DNV GL, Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) Nigerian Content Developmen­t and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), accepted to join the Nigeria ship registry implementa­tion committee.

Speaking with newsmen in Lagos, Ogbeifun said what the Nigerian Maritime Administra­tion and Safety Agency (NIMASA) and other government agencies have put in place in the past two years were enough to get Nigeria the seat.

According to him, “As far as I am concerned, Nigeria has done enough to merit more than category C. If you were at the World Maritime Day held in Lagos recently, you can tell from the measure riled out by various agencies at the event especially the Director General of NIMASA, Dr Dakuku Peterside. That culminated in the Global Maritime Security Conference held in Abuja recently. The IMO was there alongside other major

players in the global terrain.

He added that the plan the IMO to monitor and control Green House Gas (GHG) emissions ships cannot apply to Nigeria yet as there were other avenues of environmen­tal pollution locally that is yet to be addressed.

“It is part of the desire of the world to begin to pay attention to the environmen­t as we are now talking about the blue economy which has a lot to do with the sea. Up till now, environmen­tal issues have been limited principall­y to land. But now we are talking about the atmosphere. There are different emissions, you have those from your generators, cars and industries.

“While we are talking about the ships, we have cars and trucks emitting worse pollution into the atmosphere. As a nation, we cannot jump into IMO regulation­s without ensuring that jumping at that regulation will achieve the desired result. Alongside IMO, Nigeria should start by identifyin­g our domestic activities that are contributi­ng towards environmen­tal pollution through emissions, “he said.

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