THISDAY

Bala-Usman: NPA Contribute­d N151bn to FG in Four Years

- Eromosele Abiodun

The Managing Director of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Hadiza Bala-Usman, has revealed that the agency has contribute­d N151 billion to the Consolidat­ed Revenue Account (CRA) in four years.

Bala-Usman, who stated this in an interview with editors of newspapers in the country, said the NPA contribute­d N42 billion in 2017, N33 billion in 2018, N31 billion in 2019 and N45 billion in 2020 .

According to her, “Our cargo for 2019 was 80 million metric tons in the whole country. In 2020 we recorded 78 million metric tons, so we can see the difference in how much we were able to attract into the country within that period and the differenti­al.

“For container traffic, 1.84 million TEUs in 2019 and 1.86 million in 2020, called vessels was 4,251 in 2019 and 3,972 in 2020. Gross registered for the vessels

was 29.4 million in 2019 and 24.6 million in 2020. “There is a marginal drop because of the pandemic and we even thought it would be less but it is not materially different.”

The Tin Can Island and Port, she said, had the highest number of called vessels –1,197 vessels while Apapa port recorded 986 vessels within that period.

The NPA, Bala-Usman added, recorded total revenue of N305.3 billion in 2019 and N360 billion last year.

“This contributi­on to CRF is in line with the fiscal responsibi­lity act which requires for government agencies to make remittance surplus to the government coffers.

“Ensuring strict compliance to that is what we have sworn to do so that we are meeting the full compliance to the Fiscal Responsibi­lity Act. So this is the general overview of what we have been doing and our area of focus,” she added.

She said one of the key issues that have been bedeviling the NPA’s operations within the Lagos area has been the traffic congestion in Apapa and Tin Can Island.

“That is a monster that we have been grasping with, it’s a bit challenge. I have always had a particular perception of how to resolve it, there are different layers of interventi­on that kept coming on but for me I had a particular thing I thought was the right thing. It took a while for people to sort of come to terms with it but I will just give a quick overview about what it is – it is an electronic app – it is e-toll, some of you might have heard the jingle on the radio.

“It is an e-call up system which seeks to remove the human interventi­on in the process of calling up trucks and an integral part of it is the provision of Approved Truck Park, meaning that all trucks

coming into the port will go and park in a designated Truck Park and then use an electronic call up to be called upon to the port when the cargo is ready to be picked up, “she said.

She said trucks going into the port you must be parked in a Truck Park, stressing that trucks must be called upon using the e-column going forward.

“So for me sanitising the port corridors is to have a designated parking space, if you don’t tell people where to park, they park anywhere. So the onus is on you to provide them with where to park.

“We have had this debate over the past two/three years with the Presidenti­al Taskforce, the vice president.

“You must define your parking and you now need to call people up electronic­ally, remove that control from the taskforce and make it electronic, and then make it transparen­t and make it also first come, first serve.

“We have deployed, we have done the advert, we have seven Truck Parks that are available for use, and we are doing this in conjunctio­n with Lagos State Government. We will be kicking this off on 27thmeanin­g that you cannot go into the port if you are not parked in these Truck Parks.”

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