Harboursandport.com: Lagos --- The floating dockyard owned by the
Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) will save the country
over N36 million ($100 million) in capital flight annually the Agency has said.
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| Director General of NIMASA, Dakuku Peterside |
The
Director General of the Agency, Dr. Dakuku Peterside who made this known during
an interactive session with Journalists in Lagos said that the facility which
would be operated on a Public Private Partnership model will be located at a
facility of the Nigerian Navy.
The
NIMASA boss said that the Floating Dockyard would commence operations
immediately after the commissioning by President Muhammadu Buhari. He added
that when fully operational, Nigerian Shipowners and their foreign counterparts
would no longer need to take their vessels outside the country for dry docking.
Peterside also noted that efforts are
being made to create enabling environment for the growth of indigenous
participation in shipping.
According to him, “Nigeria looses up
to $100m annually simply because when our ship-owners need to dry dock their
vessels, they mostly take them to neighboring countries like Ghana and Cameroun
thus spending avoidable forex. When this facility is fully operational it has
the capacity to dry-dock any vessel in country and save the much needed foreign
exchange”.
Speaking
further Dr. Peterside noted that the facility would be operated in conjunction
with the builders as technical partners. He also assured that it will create
thousands of jobs for teeming Nigerian youths as well as provide training
opportunities for seafarers, adding that the NIMASA floating dockyard would
also be available as a training facility for the students of the Nigerian
Maritime University, Okerenkoko and other maritime institutions in the Country.
“we
are planning to ensure that the permanent location of this facility would
benefit our students for training and we have also engaged the builders to
manage the facility for a one year period at a Naval facility” while further
arrangements are being worked out”, he said.
Speaking on other issues, Dr. Peterside said that the
Agency is working on a special foreign exchange intervention for vessel parts
acquisition and loan repayment processes to enable indigenous operators compete
favourably with their foreign counterparts. He added that there is a team
working with the Central Bank of Nigeria on how best this policy can be
implemented. He said this is aside working towards the
disbursement of the Cabotage Vessel Financing Fund (CVFF) which will give room
for a full-fledged Cabotage regime with more job opportunities created.
Commenting on the
Agency’s Survey, Inspection & Certification Transformation Programme, Dr
Dakuku Peterside disclosed that 3,752 Certificates of Competency
(CoC) were issued in 2017 to successful Seafarers. Representing a 149 %
increase from the CoCs issued in 2016.
Dr. Peterside said
that the impact of this is the confidence of stakeholders who now willingly
verify certificates without prompting. He further informed that a total of
1,880 certificates were authenticated for stakeholders in 2017 alone, a
significant rise when compared to the 1013 CoCs verified in 2016.
The NIMASA DG further informed that the number of Nigerian
Seafarers placed onboard vessels from January to June this year is
2,337 representing 58.9% increase in the number of seafarers
employed stating that this move has led to job and wealth creation in line with
the Federal Government Economic Recovery and Growth Plan, ERGP.

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