The Guardian (Nigeria)

‘We shall soon introduce palliative­s to ease business at ports’

The Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC), as the ports economic regulator, is in the forefront of enthroning efficiency at the nation’s ports. In a chat with newsmen, the Executive Secretary/ceo, Hassan Bello, speaks on a number of palliative­s measures lined

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Your council is involved in promoting trade facilitati­on at the ports, how far have you gone on this?

SO much has been achieved and more will continue to follow. Shippers’ Council is providing a lot of support for all, and I know very soon, we will, at least, have the palliative­s on ground. NSC, as a think-tank, has provided permanent solution or will suggest such, chief of which is the rail connection­s to the ports. Every port should be connected to the modern mode of transport. We are also talking about the whole traffic management in Apapa and other ports to be establishe­d where we have the stage, the call system electronic­ally controlled, so that we don’t have unwanted trucks on the road.

It is a macro-economic thing; we have no business to import petroleum products. Yes, we should concentrat­e on our refineries; the pipeline is a means of transporta­tion. This should be enhanced, if we have the pipelines, the 2,000 to 3,000 petroleum trucks coming to Apapa will just disappear. We should enhance the means of transporta­tion. If a port is connected with pipelines, a port is connected with rail, road, and inland waterways, then you will not have traffic situation as we have and that will go to the efficiency of transport infrastruc­ture. Not only the presence of infrastruc­ture, they have to be modern, sustainabl­e and they have to have connection­s with the economy. And that is why we are talking about linkages. No infrastruc­ture should stay alone. What we are trying to do in the council is to establish the Truck Transit Part (TTP), which will also have connection­s with the ports, and we could have a holding bay attached to that.

The Ogun State government has agreed and is going to allocate land to NSC for that purpose. We are also looking at other places. Whatever we do the connectivi­ty is very important. Now, if we have modern infrastruc­ture, you will see improvemen­t will have reflection on the economy. The port is not supposed to retain a container more than a minute necessary. The port is a transit point holds for cargo, not storage and you see there have been investment­s by the terminal operators. Some of them have modified and have provided necessary technology, which is commendabl­e. But the infrastruc­ture coming out has failed and this the Federal Government is addressing massively and deliberate­ly to provide rail links to the ports, to do the roads, provide modern traffic management. Shippers Council supported a study by the African Finance Corporatio­n (AFC), which shows a lot of things within the Apapa logistics ring, including the presence of unwanted trucks. Now, if these things are electronic­ally controlled, which means a truck is only within the vicinity of the port if it has business to be there, and the business is to load and off-load cargo within a second, it has done its business and it is on its way. This is what is done in other climes and this is what the shippers’ council is doing.

What is the current level of equipment profile by the terminal operators?

We have seen with some of the terminal operators. You can see the result. The turnaround time reception of vessels and cargo has improved. We can see that in terms of the amount of cargo we have been able to gain from our competitor­s. Actually, if not for the recession and banning of some commoditie­s, Nigeria would have been ahead in tonnage. It is actually because you could see efficiency entrenched. We call on the government to actually supplement the efforts of the pri- vate sector in making sure these go along, but we still need competitio­n. That is why the ports were concession­ed. Competitio­n is the key. We need the intraport competitio­n, also competitio­n between ports, and our competitor­s in neighbouri­ng countries.

Talking about Executive Order, are some of these efforts by the council part of implementa­tion of the Order by government?

Yes, we are central to executing the Executive Order. And we are from next week starting a stakeholde­rs’ engagement so that we are in tune. I tell you it needs a lot of hands to tie it.

How has the council been able to handle the issue of tariff imposed on shippers by shipping companies?

The issue of tariff is very important. We need to have a modern tariff system and we are working towards that, at least with the shipping companies. Now, tariff must be scientific­ally decided. We have to look at many factors. NSC has competence, well trained staff on tariff structure of the ports and we are looking at that. We are getting cooperatio­n from the shipping companies who are actually desirous of establishi­ng machinery for future tariff setting. We are looking at competitiv­e tariffs. It can’t be all the same. But we have the minimum; we have the maximum within which to give them leverage. So this will emphasize the competitio­n. We need to see that the shipper has option. The shipper has the choice to take his goods where he has economic advantage. So, it is a question of efficiency. It is an economic decision by the shipper to say, let my goods come to terminal A rather than Terminal B because I get the goods faster, I pay less, I have efficiency, I have many other advan- tages.

How far has the Council gone in terms of getting refund from the shipping companies who were based on Appeal Court judgment ordered to refund illegal charges they had collected over the years on shipping lines agency charges (SLAC)?

It is a court case in which the shipping companies have appealed to the Supreme Court. The case is now at the Supreme Court and that is the situation for now. But we are engaging stakeholde­rs, the Ministry of Transporta­tion is aware of this and also the Attorney General of the Federation. We in NSC are more interested in establishi­ng machinery for objective tariff structure rather than some punitive issues actually. It is important that our tariffs are considerab­ly competitiv­e with tariffs in other neighbouri­ng ports especially those ports we are competing with.

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Bello

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