THISDAY

SCAN Holds Maiden Summit on Charges at Seaport

- Eromosele Abiodun

In a bid to finding a lasting solution to cost of doing business at the nation’s seaports and vessel diversion to neighbouri­ng countries ports, the Shipping Correspond­ents Associatio­n of Nigeria ( SCAN) is set to hold a summit on port charges.

SCAN is a body of journalist­s with Nigerian daily newspapers reporting the day to day activities in the nation’s maritime sector.

In a press statement made available by the President of the group, Yusuf Babalola, the summit tagged, ‘ Port charges: How plausible?’, which is expected to hold on the 15th March, 2018 in Lagos, is to find solutions to myriad of challenges confronted by shippers, terminal operators, clearing agents, importers, Port regulators and other stakeholde­rs operating in the nation’s maritime sector.

According to Babalola, the summit is borne out of series of complaints by operators, regulators, Shippers, clearing agents among other stakeholde­rs in the shipping industry over exorbitant charges that they said is fuelling diversion .

He said: “Stakeholde­rs have regretted that the port sector is already sagging in the absence of appropriat­e pricing, billing inaccuracy, unfriendly port environmen­t and cargo insecurity.

“The associatio­n therefore decided to hold a summit to address the various issues confrontin­g shippers, terminal operators, clearing agents, regulators and other stakeholde­rs especially charges that have stunted the growth of the sector since the port concession of 2006.

“Even though, concession­aires should not be solely blamed for exorbitant charges at ports even when we know they are also experienci­ng hard times due to high exchange rate, dilapidate­d port infrastruc­ture, inability to connect the port to the national grid and collapsed access roads leading to the ports but there is need to strike a balance in other to make Nigeria port a hub in West and Central African sub- region.”

“Also, charges in the port sector is not limited to terminal operators and shipping companies’ charges alone but also extended to Customs duty, Nigerian Maritime Administra­tion and Safety Agency’s dues, Nigerian Ports Authority’ pilotage dues, charges by Standard Organisati­on of Nigeria ( SON), National Agency for Food Drug Administra­tion and Control (NAFDAC) charges among other agencies operating in the port system.”

Babalola further stated that the objective of the summit is to make Nigerian seaports attractive to cargoes, investors, making it the hub of shipping activities, to open the port sector for jobs, eliminatin­g corruption and illegal charges at the various seaports.

He added that making Nigerian ports most friendly in Africa by promoting import and export trade will grow Nigerian economy and also make it attractive to investors.

“It is observed that about 90 percent of vessels berthing at Benin, Togo, Ghana and other neighbouri­ng ports their cargoes destined for Nigerian market but inability to get our charges right have made Nigeria lost the traffic to smaller ports in West Africa but the summit is set to address this by making Nigerian ports sought after in West and Central Africa.”

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