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Coastal Trade: Nigerian Operators Fall Behind Amid Challenges

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NEPC
  • Coastal Trade: Nigerian Operators Fall Behind Amid Challenges

The implementation of the Coastal and Inland Shipping (Cabotage) Act is being hampered by the myriad of challenges facing local operators in the shipping sector, ANNA OKON writes.

Cabotage, otherwise known as coastal trade, involves carriage of goods (and passengers) within the territorial and inland waters of any nation by ships and any other means of transportation from one place to the other in the same country.

As part of maritime reforms, Nigeria enacted the Cabotage Act 2003, which was designed to restrict foreign participation in Nigeria’s domestic coastal trade.

The Act makes provision for only ships that are built, flagged and manned by Nigerians to operate in Nigerian coastal waters.

The Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency had stated that even though the Act reserved the right of coastal trade to Nigerians, opportunities existed for foreign involvement.

But foreign participation in Nigerian coastal waters has overshadowed local participation owing to challenges peculiar to the Nigerian environment.

For instance, 90 per cent of the vessels trading on Nigerian waters are owned, manned and operated by foreign shipping lines, with Nigerian operators managing fishing boats and inland water transport boats that ferry goods and passengers to and from short distances.

The large cargo vessels and oil bunkers are all operated by foreign shipping lines.

The participation of local shipowners in the transportation of petroleum products ended when the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation became the sole importer of products.

“Local shipping firms are hurting,” The President, Shipowners Association of Nigeria, Dr Mkgeorge Onyung, responded when asked about the fate of the industry in the light of the NNPC monopoly.

He said most of the shipowners had invested money and time in the business, adding, “Some of them borrowed money from banks to acquire those assets and the interest on the loans is increasing.

“When there is no business for them to do, the assets will decay and people will say local operators don’t have capacity. How can they develop capacity when they don’t have business?”

The President, Nigerian Shipowners Association, Aminu Umar, told our correspondent that the NNPC employed the services of foreign vessels to lift its products.

He said the practice was a departure from the past when oil marketers employed local shipowners to ferry petroleum products for them.

Responding to the yearnings of local operators, NIMASA had made several attempts, in collaboration with the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board, to enforce the Cabotage law and increase participation of indigenous operators in the coastal trade.

In 2018, the agency cancelled waivers for foreign seafarers intending to work in vessels operating in Nigerian waters.

In February this year, the Director-General, NIMASA, Dr Dakuku Peterside, said the agency would no longer entertain any form of application for waivers under the Cabotage Act, particularly from oil firms.

Recently, the agency placed an embargo on the importation of cabotage vessels.

But all these efforts have been unable to bring about a significant increase in the participation of local operators in the shipping business.

Challenges facing local operators

Local operators are hampered majorly by finance.

Shipping business is capital-intensive and it would take the involvement of government for operators to build and operate a successful shipyard, according to the Managing Director, Genesis Worldwide Shipping, Capt. Emmanuel Iheanacho.

“The only thing that one would like to see is where the government recognises the critical nature of some of the things you are trying to do and provides a kind of guarantee that can get you the funding you need. When the government stands as a surety, then the financial institutions will have confidence to lend money to the investor.”

According to him, about $10m to $12m is needed to build a 15,000-tonne ship that can sail on a shallow sea with a draft of 6.5 metres.

Iheanacho disclosed that he obtained foreign grant to invest in his refinery and shipping business and the condition for that grant was that he must employ people from the country that gave him the grant.

Most Nigerian operators do not have access to finance, even for acquisition and maintenance of service boats.

This, in part, has resulted in their inability to build capacity and maintain their existing boats.

Our correspondent learnt that some local operators’ contracts were terminated by international oil companies because they did not have functional service boats and often defaulted in the contracts.

The Chief Executive Officer, Marine Platforms Limited, Taofeek Adegbite, highlighted the challenge of operating a shipping firm.

He said, “A vessel is a very expensive thing to maintain. You need to provision monthly. In fact, you must set your day rate per month aside for dry docking and it is simply not money you start running around looking for when you want to dry-dock your boat.

“If you want to dry-dock your boat, you are looking at a million naira a month; that is not money you can call your friends to lend you. You must understand what we are talking about here. It is not meant for the lily-livered.”

Operators had set their sights on the Cabotage Vessel Financing Fund but their hopes had proved futile as they had been unable to access the $124m fund set up to aid them in buying new vessels and maintaining existing ones.

Another challenge has been the shortage of skilled workers in the industry.

The maritime institutions in Nigeria cannot offer Certificate of Competence to seafarers and this necessitated additional training in foreign schools to enable them to obtain the CoC and be employed aboard ocean-going vessels.

As long as Nigerians do not have the necessary qualifications, they cannot be employed on ocean-going vessels, including the ones calling on Nigeria.

The National President, Nigerian Merchant Navy Officers and Water Transport Senior Staff Association, Mr Mathew Alalade, pointed out that if the foreigners were made to stop operating in Nigeria, there may be no indigenous seafarers to take up their jobs.

He said, “We don’t have people to replace these people because our training institutions have not been upgraded to higher level to issue CoC that accommodates all cadres of people on water.

“We must take it easy with the Cabotage law because our schools need be upgraded to issue first-class CoC.”

Is the CEO/Founder of Investors King Limited. A proven foreign exchange research analyst and a published author on Yahoo Finance, Businessinsider, Nasdaq, Entrepreneur.com, Investorplace, and many more. He has over two decades of experience in global financial markets.

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Appointments

President Tinubu Appoints Nigeria’s Renowned Banker, Jim Ovia as Chairman of Nigerian Education Loan Fund

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President Bola Tinubu has approved the appointment of the Founder and Chairman of Zenith Bank Plc, Jim Ovia, CFR, as the Chairman of the Board of the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND).

This was announced in a State House Press Release by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Chief Ajuri Ngelale on April 26, 2024.

According to the statement, ‘‘the President believes Mr. Ovia will bring his immense wealth of experience and professional stature to this role to advance the all-important vision of ensuring that no Nigerian student suffers a capricious end to their pursuit of higher education over a lack of funds and of ensuring that Nigerian youths, irrespective of who they are, have access to higher education and skills that will make them productive members of society and core contributors to the knowledge-based global economy of this century.’’

Jim Ovia, CFR, is the Founder and Chairman of Zenith Bank Plc, one of Africa’s largest banks with over $21.4 billion in assets and shareholders’ funds of over US$2.4 billion as at December 2023.  Zenith Bank is a global brand listed on the London Stock Exchange and the Nigerian Stock Exchange.

In addition to major operations in Nigeria and other West African countries, the Bank has sizeable operations in London and Dubai.

Jim Ovia is the Founder and Chancellor of James Hope University, Lekki, Lagos which was recently approved by the National Universities Commission (NUC) to offer postgraduate degrees in business courses.

James Hope University commenced activities in September 2023.

Through his philanthropy – the Jim Ovia Foundation – he has shown the importance he accords good education.  In support of the Nigerian youth, Jim Ovia Foundation offers scholarships to indigent students through the Mankind United to Support Total Education (MUSTE) initiative.

Most of the beneficiaries of Jim Ovia Foundation scholarship are now accountants, business administrators, lawyers, engineers, doctors etc.

He is the author of “Africa Rise and Shine”, published by ForbesBooks. The book which encapsulates Zenith Bank’s meteoric rise, details the secrets of success in doing business in Africa. He is an alumnus of the Harvard Business School (OPM), University of Louisiana (MBA), and Southern University, Louisiana, (B.Sc. Business Administration). Jim Ovia is a member of the World Economic Forum (WEF) Community of Chairpersons, and a champion of the Forum’s EDISON Alliance.

In recognition of Jim Ovia’s contributions to the economic development of Nigeria, in 2022, the Federal Government of Nigeria honoured him with Commander of the Federal Republic, CFR. Also, in May 2022, Jim Ovia was conferred with the National Productivity Order of Merit (NPOM) Award by the Federal Government of Nigeria.

Earlier, he has been conferred with the national awards of Member of the Order of the Federal Republic, MFR, and Commander of the Order of the Niger, CON, in 2000 and 2011, respectively, as a testament to his visionary leadership and contributions to Nigeria’s financial services sector.

The National Student Loan Programme is a pivotal intervention that seeks to guarantee sustainable higher education and functional skill development for all Nigerian students and youths.

The Nigerian Education Loan Fund, the implementing institution of this innovation, demands excellence and Nigerians of the finest professional ilk to guide and manage.

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Company News

NNPC and ARPHL Collaborate to Expand Port Harcourt Refinery to 310,000bpd

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The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC) has joined forces with the African Refinery Port Harcourt Limited (ARPHL) to expand the Port Harcourt Refinery.

The collaboration entails ARPHL’s subscription of a 15% equity stake in the Port Harcourt Refining Company, a move aimed at augmenting the refinery’s daily production capacity from 210,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 310,000bpd.

The agreement, finalized at a signing ceremony held at the NNPC Towers in Abuja, underscores the commitment of both parties to bolstering Nigeria’s downstream oil and gas sector.

Managing Director of African Refinery Port Harcourt Limited, Omotayo Adebajo, and NNPC’s Executive Vice-President, Downstream, Adedapo Segun, sealed the deal, marking a pivotal moment in the nation’s quest for energy self-sufficiency.

According to statements released by NNPC and ARPHL, the subscription agreement represents a crucial step towards expanding Nigeria’s refining capacity and addressing the nation’s persistent reliance on imported petroleum products.

The proposed increment of 100,000bpd in the Port Harcourt Refinery’s capacity is poised to significantly reduce Nigeria’s dependence on imported fuel, fostering economic resilience and energy security.

Speaking on the collaboration, NNPC’s Executive Vice-President highlighted the strategic significance of co-locating the proposed additional refining capacity with the existing facilities at the Port Harcourt Refinery complex.

The move not only optimizes existing infrastructure but also underscores NNPC’s commitment to modernizing and revitalizing Nigeria’s refining sector.

In a similar vein, Tola Ayo-Adeyemi, Group Executive Director, Legal and Regulatory Compliance at African Refinery Group, emphasized the transformative impact of the collaboration on Nigeria’s energy landscape.

He highlighted the ARPHL refinery project’s position as the largest private refinery in Nigeria’s South-South and South-East geopolitical regions, underscoring its pivotal role in driving regional development and economic growth.

The groundbreaking ceremony for the ARPHL refinery project, scheduled for later this year, symbolizes a significant milestone in Nigeria’s journey towards energy independence.

With construction slated to commence in 2025 and commercial operations targeted for 2027, the project represents a beacon of hope for Nigeria’s refining sector, promising to deliver over 30 million liters of various petroleum products daily upon completion.

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Tech Giants Microsoft and Alphabet Beat Expectations, Driven by AI and Cloud Revenue

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microsoft - Investorsking

Industry titans Microsoft Corp. and Google parent company Alphabet Inc. have surpassed Wall Street’s expectations, buoyed by robust growth in artificial intelligence (AI) and cloud computing revenue streams.

The stellar quarterly results underscore the pivotal role of advanced technologies in shaping the future of these tech behemoths.

Both Microsoft and Alphabet showcased impressive performances in their latest earnings reports, sending their shares soaring in after-hours trading.

Microsoft’s stock surged by 6.3%, while Alphabet witnessed an astonishing 17% increase, reflecting investor confidence in the companies’ strategic investments and innovative initiatives.

The driving force behind this remarkable success story is the accelerating demand for AI-powered solutions and cloud services. As businesses increasingly embrace digital transformation, the adoption of AI technologies and cloud infrastructure has become paramount, fueling substantial revenue growth for both Microsoft and Alphabet.

At the forefront of this AI revolution, Microsoft and Alphabet have been fervently expanding their AI capabilities and integrating them into a wide array of products and services.

From advanced AI models to cloud-based AI solutions, both companies have been relentless in their pursuit of technological innovation, positioning themselves as leaders in the rapidly evolving AI landscape.

Silicon Valley has heralded 2024 as the year of generative AI, a groundbreaking technology capable of creating text, images, and videos from simple prompts.

Microsoft and Alphabet have capitalized on this trend, leveraging generative AI to drive business growth and enhance their cloud computing offerings.

The surge in cloud computing demand has been a particularly welcome development for Google, which has long trailed behind rivals such as Amazon and Microsoft in this competitive market.

After achieving profitability in its cloud operation last year, Google’s first-quarter profit of $900 million far exceeded analysts’ projections, signaling a significant turnaround for the tech giant.

Microsoft’s Azure cloud computing platform also experienced robust growth, with sales climbing by 31% in the quarter, surpassing analysts’ expectations.

The integration of AI technology into Azure subscriptions has proven to be a key driver of growth, as businesses increasingly recognize the value of AI-driven insights and automation.

Furthermore, both Microsoft and Alphabet have seen promising uptake of AI-powered tools across various industries. From AI assistants for office productivity to AI-driven coding platforms, these companies are empowering businesses with cutting-edge AI solutions that enhance productivity, efficiency, and innovation.

Despite the stellar performance of Microsoft and Alphabet, the broader tech landscape remains dynamic and competitive.

While both companies have demonstrated resilience and adaptability in navigating market challenges, they must continue to innovate and evolve to maintain their competitive edge in an increasingly digital world.

As the AI and cloud computing revolution continues to unfold, Microsoft and Alphabet are well-positioned to lead the charge, driving innovation, shaping industries, and delivering value to customers around the globe. With their unwavering commitment to technological excellence, these tech giants are poised for continued success in the dynamic landscape of the digital age.

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