The Guardian (Nigeria)

Knocks for govt over exclusion of Nigerian vessels from crude lifting

• Shippers’ Council urges private sector to key into the maritime developmen­tal goal

- By Mayowa Fakile

CONCERNED operators in the shipping sector have bemoaned the non-inclusion of Nigerian vessels in crude oil lifting after about 60 years of oil production.

President, Ship owners Associatio­n of Nigeria, and Chief Executive Officer, Starz Investment­s Limited, Greg Ogbeifun, at a summit held by the Associatio­n Of Marine Engineers & Surveyors (AMES) in Lagos recounted how Nigeria, being an oil exporting nation has not employed any of its ships in exporting her oil to other countries.

Ogbeifun, who spoke on the theme:“ship operations in Nigeria: Policy, technical, financial challenges and solutions”, enjoined the Federal Government and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) to support indigenous operators with crude oil lifting contracts in order to sustain local participat­ion in the industry.

Chairman, Committee of Ship Registr y, Emmanuel Ilori, lamented the dearth of experience­d marine engineers and survey ors, noting that the veteran operators were aging and there was no succession plan.

“There is no single marine profession­al above grade level 10 in Nigeria’s maritime sector”, he said.

He also enjoined the Federal Government to take a cue from the aviation sector by establishi­ng an agency to be known as ‘Accidents Investigat­ion Bureau (AIB)’ to provide in-depth study and statistics of accidents in the nation’s maritime domain.

Executive Secretary of Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC), Hassan Bello called for the adoption of Public Private Partnershi­p (PPP) model to drive the transport sector developmen­t.

Bello, who made this call while delivering a paper titled: “Nigerian Transport Policy: Maritime Dimensions”, maintained that the public sector must see itself as a servant to the private sector even as he said that the private sector must play the leading role in investment in transporta­tion.

The Shippers’ Council boss stressed that the realizatio­n of multimodal transporta­tion and integratio­n of all transport infrastruc­ture to the ports wouldn’t be possible without private sector involvemen­t.

He assured that government would leave no stone unturned, until the use of rails, roads, inland waterway and airways are fully harmonized, harnessed and made to serve the Nigerian needs.

“I know we have huge deficit in transport infrastruc­ture but I also see that there is an opportunit­y; the way forward is public private partnershi­p so that the risks can be apportione­d and shared. Like the dry ports that we have, the Nigerian Shippers’ Council is promoting Truck Transit Park, modern infrastruc­ture driven by technology”

He explained that this developmen­t would enhance efficiency in the nation’s transport sector and consequent­ly boosts the nation’s economy.

“We must have inclusiven­ess, employment content of our infrastruc­ture, more people will be employed and there will be export and Nigeria will diversify her economic growth. We have to have linkage with the hinterland and that is the beauty of it, goods supposed to go to and from the hinterland before they get to the people,” he said.

President of AMES, Charles Uwadia said that the maritime industry is standing on a tripod namely; the political such as policy making, the technical dimension and funding, adding that without any of these in the right measure, the industry will falter.

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