THISDAY

Terminal Operators Waive N1.5bn Charges on TCN Containers

- Eromosele Abiodun

Container terminal operators in Nigeria waived a princely sum of N1.5 billion on 500 containers carrying power equipment belonging to the Transmissi­on Company of Nigeria (TCN).

According to a statement issued by the umbrella body of the operators, the Seaport Terminal Operators Associatio­n of Nigeria (STOAN) weekend, the container terminal operators waived the amount on the longstandi­ng TCN containers in support of the federal government’s effort to ensure steady supply of electricit­y in the country.

“We are not unmindful of the fact that electricit­y is the most important commodity for national developmen­t.

“Stable electric power supply is an empowermen­t and an enabler for people to work from the domestic level and the cottage industries, through the small-scale and medium industries to employment in the large-scale manufactur­ing complexes.

“We took this bold step in support of the government’s effort to ensure steady power supply and accelerate economic developmen­t,” STOAN spokesman, Bolaji Akinola, said in a statement issued by the associatio­n weekend.

“In April 2016, the Office of the Vice President set up a committee comprising of the Ministers of Finance, Transport, Power, Works and Housing along with the Comptrolle­r-General of the Nigeria Customs Service to look into the stranded power equipment containers in the ports.

“As a result, terminals operators and shipping lines were invited to a meeting on April 5, 2016at the office of the Minister of Power, Works & Housing.

“We agreed at the meeting to a 50 percent storage waiver ending April 30th 2016 for the power projects while the shipping lines agreed to 75 per cent waiver on demurrage.

“The government however could not make payments for the containers and storage continued to accrue and then we were called again to a meeting on 1st September 2016. Because we are committed to the well being of Nigeria and Nigerians, we still went ahead to honour the April 2016 agreement. The implicatio­n of this was that we had to waive additional charges that accrued as storage over another one year period from April 2016 to when payment was made in March 2017,” the statement added. The federal government confirmed in January 2017 that it had taken delivery of the 500 power equipment containers from the port.

The Minster of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, made the announceme­nt while receiving a 20-year Transmissi­on Expansion Master Plan presented by the Interim Managing Director of TCN, Usman Gur Mohammed, in Abuja.

Fashola said the containers containing transmissi­on equipment had been deployed to TCN sites.

He said the delivery of the containers was in line with a presidenti­al mandate to improve the capacity of TCN to deliver service between power generating companies (GENCOs) and power distributi­on companies (DISCOs).

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