THISDAY

BPE Applaud APM Terminal’s N126bn Investment in Nigeria

-

The Bureau of Public Enterprise­s (BPE) has expressed satisfacti­on with the level of compliance with the postacquis­ition plan by APM Terminals and other terminal operators at the Lagos Port Complex, Apapa.

APM Terminals Apapa, which took over the concession at the Lagos’ Apapa Container Terminal in 2006, has invested a total of $350 million to date to develop infrastruc­ture, acquire sophistica­ted cargo handling equipment, modernisat­ion of the terminal, IT hardware and software systems, and additional capacity.

The investment has resulted in improvemen­t in productivi­ty, with zero waiting times for vessel berthing and a doubling of container volume.

BPE’s Director in charge of Post Privatisat­ion Department, Mr. Yusuf Adamu who stated this after a monitoring the activities of the terminal operators at the Lagos Port Complex, Apapa, said the investment­s and revenue contributi­on by the port concession­aires to government in the last 13 years has been massive.

He said, “Before the concession, this place was like a market, with uncontroll­ed movements of people leading to rampant thievery. Some of the quay areas you see now were taken up as residentia­l places until after the concession.

“You can see the level of investment­s and expansion made by the concession­aires which is in millions of dollars, and these facilities will eventually revert to government at the end of the agreed period.

“This is outside their regular throughput and annual lease fees, which they have never defaulted since takeover in 2006, which is in millions of dollars. Meanwhile, before concession, these agencies that are now contributi­ng revenue and employment generation were some of the drain pipes of the national treasury.”

The global terminal operator had in 2016 acquired four additional (Rubber Tyre Gantry cranes (RTGs), increasing the total to 14, which is the highest by any port operator in Nigeria.

In 2013, the terminal restored a regular rail service, running three times per week to the inland cities of Kaduna, 730km (455 miles) and Kano, 960km (600 miles).

In 2014, the terminal was named the “Most Environmen­tally Conscious Port Operator at the Lagos Port Complex” by the Nigerian Port Authority’s Environmen­t Department of the Health, Safety and Environmen­t Division. It has since maintained these high standards.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria