Harboursandport.com: Lagos - The Federal Government on Tuesday projected a 10 per cent growth
in the Nigerian maritime industry. This was contained in the 2019/2020 maritime
forecast unveiled by the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency
(NIMASA) in Lagos. The forecast, the second in the series, tagged “Harnessing
the Maritime and Shipping Sector for Sustainable Growth.
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L-R:
Rector, Maritime Academy of Nigeria, (MAN) Oron, Commodore Emmanuel
Duja Effedua, Captain Martins Fakrongha from Headquarters Western
Naval Command, Executive Director Finance & Administration,
Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Mr
Bashir Yusuf Jamoh, Chairman, Ship-owners Forum, Mrs Margaret
Orakwusi and the DG NIMASA, Dr Dakuku Peterside, during the public
presentation of Nigeria’s Maritime Industry Forecast for 2019-2020
held in Lagos on Tuesday, 29 January 2019.
It is meant to give direction to investors and stakeholders in
the industry in their planning and investment decisions as part of efforts to
attract more foreign direct investment to the economy. Major plans covered by
the forecast arethe economic
environment, the maritime industry (local and global), regulatory framework,
and emerging opportunities and challenges.
Speaking at the unveiling ceremony, the Director General of
NIMASA, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, said this year’s forecast will be addressing how emerging trends in
the global maritime industry would affect the Nigerian maritime sector as well
as domestic factors that will influence the sector. Dakuku said the maritime
industry held a lot of promise for Nigeria.
“The maritime sector has
the potential of contributing at least 10% of Nigeria’s GDP in no distant
future, as Nigeria has the biggest market in Africa; and generates about 65-67%
of cargo throughput in West Africa, and 65% of all cargo heading for these
regions will most likely end up in the Nigerian market,” the DG said.
According to the forecast, the
outlook for the economy in 2019 reflects, on the global side, concerns about a
substantial global economic growth slowdown, likely higher US interest rates, a
stronger dollar and volatile oil prices, possibly averaging below US$60pb, and
domestically, the impact of sentiments surrounding the 2019 general elections
and post-electoral transition.
The empirical analysis projects
the growth of the total fleet size in 2019 over 2018 to be 10.33%, easing to
8.75% for 2020. Oil tanker fleet size is projected to decrease by 11.2% for
both 2019 and recover to a positive growth of 0.11% by 2020. Non-oil tanker
fleet size is estimated to increase by 14.3% in 2019 and 10.2% in 2020, while
Oil Rig count is projected to increase by 6.98% and 6.5% for 2019 and 2020,
respectively.
Dakuku identified asset building/acquisition and human capacity
development as two factors that would enable Nigerians play a major role in the
maritime and shipping sector. He said shipping is capital intensive and the
Cabotage Vessel Financing Fund (CVFF) will not be adequate to address the huge
demand for maritime asset. This propelled the Agency to seek other ship
financing models, he said.
“We have been engaging with government at the highest level
to push for special intervention fund, special interest rate and other
incentives that will drive optimal performance in the sector. We shall not
relent in our drive to put the right framework together to help beneficiaries
and investors have good return on investment. The country is also making huge
investments in human capacity development in the sector, which means that more
Nigerians will get involved in shipping, especially, in shipping operations,” Peterside stated.
The NIMASA DG also disclosed
that the government had made consistent effort to drive changes in the maritime
and shipping sector through regulatory and infrastructural developments. He
added that the main public bodies regulating the maritime and shipping sector
had all keyed into the government’s strategies to reform the operating
environment and improve on the country’s ease of doing business index, which
has the potential of attracting more businesses to the maritime industry.
He said 2018 offered government
opportunities for strategic changes in policies to restore growth in the
economy, invest in the people and build a globally competitive economy. Dakuku
assured the stakeholders of the Agency’s resolve to push for reforms that will
help grow the maritime sector, noting that building and enhancing indigenous
capacity in the shipping and maritime sector and ensuring a conducive playing
field for operators to tap into the vast economic benefits inherent in shipping
will be made a priority.
A consultant and faculty at
the Lagos Business School, Dr. Doyin Salami, who reviewed the forecast, noted that it was intended to provide
the context in which the sector will operate in 2019 to 2020. Salami said it was expected that in 2019, the Petroleum Industry Bill
(PIB) will be passed; the anti-piracy bill will become law, and more
International Maritime Organisation (IMO) conventions would be domesticated in
Nigeria.
Salami stated that the
general election and its aftermath was a major factor that will affect the
economy this year. The other, according to him, is happenings in the global
economy, especially the United States/China trade war.
He also observed that NIMASA
based the forecast on the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) of the
Federal Government and charged stakeholders to key into the Agency’s
vision.
Earlier in his welcome
address, the Minister of Transportation, Rt. Hon. Rotimi Amaechi, emphasised
the importance of shipping in poverty alleviation and wealth creation. Amaechi,
who was represented by the Deputy Director, Cabotage and Shipping Development
in the Ministry, Mrs. Gloria Adie-Ayabie, informed stakeholders that the
Federal Government had initiated reforms to facilitate the development of the
Blue Economy, saying this involves the enactment of laws and domestication of
relevant international instruments.
Stakeholders in attendance at
the event, including the NIMASA Board Chairman, General Jonathan India Garba
(rtd.), and Rector, Maritime Academy of Nigeria (MAN), Oron, Commodore Emmanuel
Duja Effedua (rtd), agreed that the forecast was a step in the right direction
and called for continuous support for NIMASA to enable it achieve its mandate
of realising a robust maritime sector.
It would be recalled that the
Agency unveiled the first maritime forecast in the industry in February 2018,
projected at 5% growth along with other potentials, most of which were achieved
and served as a guide to stakeholders and investors. There was a significant
growth and development in the sector and it is also expected to improve in the
year 2019-2020.
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