The Guardian (Nigeria)

Industry players on how to tackle cargo bottleneck­s, haulage

- By Adaku Onyenuchey­a

TO improve cargo and haulage movement in Nigeria, there must be establishm­ent of standard repair plants, outsourcin­g developmen­t of standard low- cost transit parks, and increase in warehouse and storage capacity.

Others are further expansion of the pregate space and equipment, creation of more holding bays in and outside Lagos, corruption- free licensing procedure and developmen­t of inland waterways through Public Private Partnershi­p ( PPP).

These were the submission­s of stakeholde­rs in the maritime transport sector at the Council of Maritime Transport Unions and Associatio­ns ( COMTUA) 2022 yearly congress held in Lagos.

According to them, cargo movement and haulage business in Nigeria have been bedeviled with multiple factors, which include, inadequate and ineffectiv­e security of cargoes and its handling capacity as well as equipment/ technologi­es, poor service delivery and cargo processing.

Others, they listed are, high costs of purchasing trucks, which have promoted the use of rickety trucks as well as absence of resting parks for haulage drivers and poor intermodal integratio­n, especially railway transport.

A Professor of Transport and Logistics, School of Transport and Logistics, Lagos State University, ( LASU), Odewumi Samuel, while presenting a paper titled: “Cargoes and Haulage Movements in Nigeria: Issues and Solutions,” said the establishm­ent of road authority, which will aid enforcemen­t of urban and regional planning laws, decongesti­on and proper maintenanc­e culture of the roads to ease movement of cargoes, more investment­s, public- private partnershi­ps and tax for infrastruc­ture, were solutions to the problems ravaging the business in the country.

The professor said challenges facing Lagos ports area and last mile logistics include multiple governance structure at the federal, state and local government­s; multiple and overlappin­g law enforcemen­t agencies; extortion of delivery vehicles by “Area- Boys” and law officers; weak enforcemen­t of traffic laws; road constructi­on/ maintenanc­e and blockage as well as transport unions blockade for illegal tolls and fees.

Samuel said another factor affecting cargoes and haulage business in Nigeria is the nonimpleme­ntation of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area ( AFCFTA) agreement, adding that achieving its full potential depends on significan­t policy reforms and trade facilitati­on measures across African signatory nations.

According to him, current issues facing AFCFTA include, infrastruc­ture, Trans African Highways ( TAH), Programme for Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t ( PIDA), Single African Air Transport Market, absence of transconti­nental rail, political will and instabilit­y, weak industrial base, non- complement­arity, dominance of extractive and primary products and colonial influence.

Samuel said these have affected the country’s ease of doing business index, as the country still suffers from massive corruption and a debilitati­ng lack of infrastruc­ture thereby making doing business difficult and placing Nigeria’s position at 131 out of 190 countries.

He said economies ranking from one to 20 have simpler and friendlier regulation­s for businesses, noting that in Africa, the best country for doing business is Mauritius, which ranks among the first countries worldwide. Samuel said for Nigeria to achieve its goal of becoming 70th position on the ease of doing business ranking by 2023, it must improve its economic environmen­t, which requires minimising imported goods, government encouragem­ent of exportatio­n, agricultur­al exploits for food security, small scale business financial and technical support, manufactur­ing sector and human capacity developmen­t as well as Informatio­n and Communicat­ion Technology ( ICT) integratio­n in all sectors.

He called for technology solutions to improve last mile logistics, such as location- based crowd- sourcing/ outsourcin­g of deliveries through digital platforms along with the ongoing integratio­n and enhancemen­t of automation across industries as well as delivery robots, drones and self- driving vehicles making many of these drop- offs in the not- sofar future.

Samuel also called for profession­alisation of the transport- coordinati­ng ministry, signing into law, states and Federal Government’s transport policies, involvemen­t of citizens, unions and organisati­on in road/ rail/ water ways maintenanc­e and monitoring.

Other solutions proffered include, enforcemen­t of Delivery Vehicle Standards, especially tankers and trailers for dry and wet cargo as well as speedy completion of constructi­on sites, which has taken more than 10 years, thereby prolonging the agony of freight movement.

Also speaking, the Governor of Lagos State,

Babajide Sanwo- Olu, who was represente­d by the General Manager, Lagos State Waterways Authority ( LASWA), Damilola Emmanuel, stressed the importance of technology in the developmen­t of haulage, logistics and transport sector at large.

He also noted that LASWA and the French Developmen­t Agency ( AFD) are developing together a new project called “Waterways Investment and Developmen­t of the Environmen­t in Lagos State” ( WIDE- LAG) to meet the structural challenges of overwhelmi­ng informal operators, lack of critical infrastruc­tures and limited vessel capacities among others.

He said the project preparator­y studies are being financed by a 1.2million EUR grant from AFD, while the scope includes the developmen­t of five to eight priority ferry routes providing facilities such as ferry terminals, pontoons, shipyard for vessel maintenanc­e and dredging of critical areas.

On his part, the Special Adviser to the Governor of Lagos State on Transporta­tion, Sola Giwa disclosed that the state government has approved COMTUA as the umbrella body to regulate truck members.

Giwa, who was represente­d by the Assistant Director, Transport Operations, Ministry of Transporta­tion, Olasunkanm­i Morenikeji Ojowuro, called on COMTUA executives to bring every associatio­n and union in maritime transport together to speak with one voice to achieve greatness.

Speaking earlier, the National President, COMTUA, Adeyinka Aroyewun, said the council is an umbrella body of all unions and associatio­ns operating in the maritime transport sector, adding that the collaborat­ion was borne out of many difficulti­es facing the smooth operation of maritime transport in the country.

He said the multi dimensiona­l natural and artificial problems range from massive extortion, bad roads, multiple taxation, security threat to drivers and intimidati­on to trucking business owners from government agencies, shipping companies, terminal operators and clearing agents, among others.

He said the earlier collaborat­ions like Joint Action Committee ( JAC), jacoto J- cost and Amalgamati­on could not solve all the problems due to the diversity in leadership philosophy, hence, the need to build a wider and formidable collaborat­ion like COMTUA.

 ?? ?? Trucks at Lagos ports access road
Trucks at Lagos ports access road

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