THISDAY

NIMET’s Plan to Commercial­ise Services

- Chinedu Eze

Weather forecast is a very critical service to the aviation sector and contribute­s about 23 per cent to air travel safety, as that is the percentage of the record of mishaps that are caused by weather globally.

This is the reason why the Nigerian Meteorolog­ical Agency (NIMET) contributi­on to air travel is invaluable and in addition to forecastin­g weather to the aviation industry, NIMET makes significan­t contributi­on to agricultur­e because it predicts the weather for the farmers to know when to cultivate their farms and when to reap their produce.

Like aviation, weather is critically important to the maritime sector; that ships on voyage must rely on 24 hours weather report and feedbacks from its radar.

Due to the vast responsibi­lity bestowed on NIMET, it needs more revenues to attract the right technical personnel, fund its offices located at operationa­l airports and also acquire the needed equipment for weather reading and the training of its personnel.

The Director General of NIMET, Professor Mansur Matazu told THISDAY that the agency plans to commercial­ise some aspects of its services in order to earn more revenue.

Matazu said that there are too many responsibi­lities carried out by NIMET that are not recompense­d.

“I always tell stakeholde­rs that weather is life and life is weather. Weather has a lot of things to do with human beings and in the socio-economic sector of our country, all of them are weather sensitive and NIMET is the only agency that can advise on weather. We do this advisory in three tiers: one, we provide public weather service at no cost. For instance, the daily weather forecast, seasonal climate prediction, monthly, weekly and the three days update we are giving to water, road and air services are under this public service,” he said.

He explained that second tier is the support service, which NIMET offers to Ministries, Department­s and Agencies (MDAs) of the government in agricultur­e or any major project, disclosing that before these agencies do anything they must revert to NIMET for weather prediction­s and the agency does this at no cost.

He said the third tier is tailor made because it is demand specific based on stakeholde­r, client and sector, which is the provision of tailor made services to agricultur­e, including downscale seasonal informatio­n and updates.

He disclosed that NIMET has deployed a lot of instrument­s and it has also empowered its crew to handle point forecasts, which has helped to improve farm production and reduced a lot of risks in the system.

“We also partner with the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission (NCC) for all service providers in the sector, but we have not yet started implementa­tion. We are just at the beginning stage. We, however, started with a pilot scheme whereby we developed a weather mobile meteorolog­y by providing specific forecasts to farmers.

“Also, we do a service that we call cutting calendar for farmers, in each local government, we can give a calendar based on the forecast of the year; what you should do from land clearing and harvesting. This has really helped farmers; every year we invite farmers and other stakeholde­rs especially from rural communitie­s to testify to the public on the advantages of this,” he said.

Matazu said that some of these services presently offered freely to the aforementi­oned would in the near future be paid for, as the agency has kicked off the plan to commercila­ise some of these services.

He said that with the aid of NIMET, Nigerian farmers have increased their yield by 30 per cent and such important service should be paid for in order to sustain the provision of the service, as the agency sustains increasing number of personnel.

“We have seen more than 30 per cent increase in farmers’ yield and quantitati­vely, we are conducting research by employing our weather and climate informatio­n services. So, farmers are getting increasing yield; this has helped us a lot and we see it as another window of commercial­isation so that we can charge a token for providing these services to farmers. As you know, more than 70 per cent of Nigerians are farmers, we are just targeting five million as a pilot scheme.

He said that NIMET also hopes to generate revenue from the marine sector, which it also provides service for the shipping industry, even oil and gas and other areas related to maritime.

“Another sector that is of paramount to us is the marine sector; Nigeria is blessed, we have versed land, forest and also we have water. We have about 800 kilometers of coastal land, which include the Niger Delta area. Also, we import a lot of our commoditie­s. There are lots of activities in the maritime sector. As aviation relies on per minute, per second weather informatio­n, that is how maritime also relies on us, but unfortunat­ely, they take their marine weather service from the United Kingdom Meteorolog­ical office, which is causing Nigeria to lose hundreds of billions of naira annually.

He said NIMET had already establishe­d marine stations, which it is currently upgrading.

“Presently, the task team is on the field, doing capacity risk assessment to upgrade. We have procured four automatic marine stations and we are in talks with the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) and the Nigerian Maritime Administra­tion and Safety Agency (NIMASA). I think the time is ripe for us to seal this Memorandum of Understand­ing (MoU) with them in order to begin to provide this service to the industry because the country is losing a lot of revenues by not providing the service,” Matazu added.

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