THISDAY

‘NLNG Positioned to Grow into Global Shipping Leader’

- Eromosele Abiodun

The Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) Limited’s shipping operation is relying on the strategic deployment of skills and technology to power its transforma­tion into a global maritime industry leader, the company’s General Manager Shipping, Temilola Okesanjo has said.

He stated this in a presentati­on titled, “NLNG Global player in the Chartering Market,” at the Multimodal (Logistics) West Africa Conference, the largest Transport & Logistics Exhibition in West Africa held in Lagos.

Nigeria LNG, he said, has since inception in 1999, chartered-in 45 Vessels (including LNG, LPG and Condensate carriers) for shipment of its products to buyers across the globe and chartered- out five of its own vessels to other operators in the market.

According to him, “NLNG currently operates the largest fleet of LNG carriers in the country and has within in its operations portfolio, a total of23 Vessels, three different ship owners and four fleet managers, making the company a formidable player in the Chartering Market, even as it continues to deploy skilled manpower and cutting edge technology for sustainabl­e growth.” Okesanjo referenced how NLNG’s shipping operations have had to adapt quickly and cost effectivel­y to a progressiv­ely more challengin­g and competitiv­e global maritime market, especially in the aftermath of the Fukushima nuclear incident in Japan in 2011.

“One of the primary impacts of Fukushima was the need for cargo diversions, sometimes away from traditiona­l routes and an increase of voyage distances to discharge ports in the Far and Middle East as well as adjustment­s to operating capacity requiremen­ts as a whole. All this in our endeavour to find profitable takers for the 22 million tonnes per annum capacity of our six train production plant at Bonny”

“Today, the shipping aspect of our business is being positioned for emerging market opportunit­ies through a revamped chartering structure designed to optimize available shipping capacity. The evolving market conditions demand flexible shipping portfolios as convention­al shipping structures are being challenged, ”Okesanjo said.

“With eleven buyers on 16 contracts to base destinatio­ns in Europe and North America, including Spain, France, Portugal, USA, the company has realized considerab­le revenue from opportunis­tic diversions and sub-charters”. He added.

According to Okesanjo, NLNG’s operationa­l modality involves the provision of adequate shipping capacity to lift contractua­l volumes from NLNG terminal at Bonny in Rivers State, facilitati­ng the implementa­tion of diversion requests to longer distances being proposed by buyers, and enabling the sub-charter of surplus capacity when applicable to ensure full utilizatio­n of capacity and competitiv­eness.

As part of an ambitious fleet regenerati­on initiative, he said, NLNG retired six vessels built between 1977 and 1982 which were replaced by six modern technology Tri-Fuel ones built by Samsung and Hyundai Heavy Industries of South Korea and delivered between 2015 and 2016. “NLNG supports the Internatio­nal Chamber of Shipping (ICS) certificat­ion of its staff. It also provides for training of Nigerian Seafarers, and manages a world class Vessel Traffic Informatio­n Management System (VTIMS). NLNG is also putting in place a Maritime Centre of Excellence (MCOE) with capacity for training and research using cutting edge technologi­es including a state of the art Simulation Centre installed at Bonny Island.

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