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NIMASA to Review 3% Freight Benchmark

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  • NIMASA to Review 3% Freight Benchmark

The Director-General, Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr, has inaugurated a committee to review the parameters for charging three per cent freight benchmark, currently collected by the agency.

According to the Head, Corporate Communications Team of NIMASA, Hajia Lami Tumaka, Peterside said that the vision of the agency was to advance Nigeria’s global maritime interests.

He said, “The inauguration of the committee is coming on the heels of a recent visit to the agency by the Shipping Association of Nigeria.”

The director-general said the association was an assemblage of the major shipping companies operating in the country, who expressed concern over the current benchmark freight rate used in the industry.

The shipping companies had argued that the benchmark did not represent three per cent of the freight.

The representatives of the companies argued that if it is calculated, using some other parameters, it will be discovered that the shipping companies were being charged more than what they should pay.

“As an organisation that is sensitive, we acknowledge that our actions have overall impact on businesses and our function as a regulatory agency is not to stifle business but to encourage businesses, promote shipping and support both indigenous entrepreneurs and those who do business in our country.

“Also, our ultimate objective is to create the enabling environment for the industry to thrive, not for us to kill the industry.

“We realise that there must be a meeting point between practitioners in the industry and those of us who are on the regulatory side.

“It is on that basis that we decided to assemble a team of stakeholders; a mixed team made up of practitioners in the industry.

“Other regulators and other stakeholders to come together to advise us on what should constitute our benchmark,” NAN quotes the director-general as saying.

Peterside, however, urged the committee to let the overall national interest guide their decisions, adding that “not how much money that will come to the coffers of NIMASA and to them as businessmen’’.

“Let us be guided by the national interest of our country and the interest of the industry where we are all practising.

“Things we must do must be in line with global best practices, so that we will remain competitive,’’ NAN quotes him as saying.

The committee has six weeks to submit its recommendations, which will be studied by the Management of NIMASA and thereafter forwarded to the Minister of Transportation, Mr Rotimi Amaechi in line with Section 5, Sub (1) of the NIMASA Act, 2007 for further action.

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