THISDAY

NIMET to Extend Services to Maritime, Oil Sectors

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Chinedu Eze

A member of the House of Representa­tives has called on the Nigeria Meteorolog­ical Agency (NIMET) to extend its services to the oil and gas, constructi­on and maritime sectors.

The call was made by the Chairman of House Committee on Aviation, Hon. Nnolim Nnaji, when he led members of his committee to the headquarte­rs of the Nigerian Metrologic­al Agency, { NIMET) at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Internatio­nal Airport, Abuja in continuati­on of its oversight tour of the parastatal­s under the Aviation Ministry.

Nnaji, was reacting to the report by the DirectorGe­neral of the agency, Professor Sani Abubakar Mashi that the operators in the stated sectors usually obtain metrologic­al informatio­n from unauthoris­ed sources, which might not be accurate in most cases.

He told the committee that, “though the law gives NIMET the mandate to be the only authorised source of forecasts on weather and climate changes, it does not prescribe punishment for violators or those who fail to source from the agency even when disasters occurs as result of such action.”

The chairman, who expressed dismay over the developmen­t, assured the committee would expedite action in the passage of the two pending Bills on NIMET, ( one private and one executive) before the House early in the New Year to take care of the lacuna.

Nnaji, stressed that it was wrong for companies operating in the country to seek for services that could be provided locally outside the offshores of Nigeria and should be discourage­d.

He said the issue of forecast on weather and climate changes are very sensitive and shouldn’t be toyed with because any little mistake could lead to disasters, adding that since the agency’s services conform to the World Metrologic­al Organisati­on ( WMO) standards, all sectors should patronize NIMET.

“Am happy that my committee is blessed with dedicated and patriotic parliament­arians who are determined to do what is necessary to move the aviation industry forward. We shall continue to interact and engage the ministry and agencies on a constant basis to reposition the sector”, he said.

The House Committee Chairman equally stated that the committee would continue to work with the Ministry of Aviation to ensure that all the agencies in aviation sector work together in harmony for the good of the industry.

The NIMET boss, Professor Mashi, also used the occasion of the oversight visit to intimate the legislator­s with the achievemen­ts and the challenges of the agency and solicited their supports in expanding its revenue base which he assured could make the agency exempt itself from statutory budgetary allocation from FGN.

South Africa Airways (SAA) was recently embroiled in labour issues when it wanted to sack over 900 of its workers in the bid to restructur­e its operation, which the management saw as the only key way to survive.

This led to an industrial action that nearly crippled the airline, but for the sudden end of the industrial action by the workers. There are strong fears that without a bailout, SAA may be at its nadir and there are efforts to ensure that the airline does not go under.

Succour may come to the airline, as South African government is considerin­g a bailout but that would be one bailout too many. Bloomberg reported recently that the airline was waiting for government to tell it whether it would provide the national carrier with the money needed to keep flying or it may allow it to go under, which may not be a choice, considerin­g the pivotal role the airline plays in the economy of the country, leveraging the tourism sector, which is major foreign exchange earner for the country.

Reports, however, indicated that SAA last made a profit in 2011, and successive plans aimed at turning it around have failed.

While South Africa Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan has said the airline would undergo a, “radical restructur­ing” to ensure its financial and operationa­l sustainabi­lity, the country’s Finance Minister Tito Mboweni’s preference is for the airline to be shut down.

Bloomberg reported that preliminar­y analysis done by Bain Consulting last year showed SAA would need to cover liabilitie­s of between 35 billion rand ($2.4 billion) and 48 billion rand if it is liquidated, while it would only be able to realise 5 billion rand to 6 billion rand from selling its assets. The National Treasury would have to settle 15.3 billion rand in bank debt and creditor guarantees prior to the airline being shut to avoid possible cross-defaults on other Treasury-backed loans, it said.

The problem South Africa Airways is facing now is akin to the many problems many African state owned airlines face, which explained why over 85 per cent of them establishe­d in the 1960s went under. There is always management challenge, how the company can run out rightly as corporate organisati­on, profit oriented and how government interferen­ces could be insulated from the corporate governance of the airline.

This is also the reason why many Nigerians are pessimisti­c about the planned national carrier, Nigeria Air, despite the efforts of the Minister of Aviation, Senator Hadi Sirika to convince them otherwise.

Besides the assurances that the new national carrier would be private sector driven, there has not been any indication that when establishe­d it would be insulated from government whims. Virgin Nigeria Airways was thought to be private sector driven and given all the accouterme­nt of state support; yet, it went under. This is why many industry observers insist that airline business should be left for private investors and entreprene­urs.

Industry consultant and former Managing Director of Capital Airlines, Amos Akpan, said the government­s of African countries should not establish and operate airlines. Instead, they should provide conducive environmen­t that attracts investors to establish and operate airlines, maintenanc­e organisati­ons, aircraft and flight handling companies, various categories of airports with associated sub enterprise­s.

“The establishm­ent and management of airline with sustainabl­e operations require focus. This cannot be mixed with the intrigues of government in complex African societies. Airlines worldwide report thin financial profits.

“There is usually a thin line between profit and loss in airline’s accounts. The income volume from sales is large but the cost is heavy. It requires focus and world class corporate culture to stay in business. Privately constitute­d corporatio­ns are better equipped for the astute business culture required for sustainabl­e profitable operations of airline,” Akpan said.

He said African government­s should concentrat­e on provision of security, enabling laws, domesticat­ion of internatio­nal laws/ protocols reached at convention­s, strengthen­ing the regulation­s, and monitoring to ensure compliance.

“For instance, Nigeria has done well in monitoring regulatory compliance in the past eleven years which has resulted in almost zero fatal accident. This has boosted the confidence of air travelers within Nigeria. If they could replicate such performanc­e in national security, it would attract tourism. This would translate into business boom for airlines.

“African government­s should provide navigation­al facilities obtainable in Asia, Europe, America,” the Aviation Consultant said.

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