Harboursandport.com: Lagos - Executive officers of the Port of Antwerp International, Belgium have said that the National Maritime Transport Policy being developed by Nigeria is of interest in Belgium for possible windows of investment opportunity.
![]() |
Director-General, Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr. Bashir Jamoh (middle), flanked by Managing Director of APEC-Antwerp/Flanders Port Training Centre and Port of Antwerp International, Mr. Kristof Waterschoot (left), and Director at Port of Antwerp International, Mr. Mario Lievens, after a meeting at the Nigerian Belgian Chamber of Commerce, Onikan, Lagos, when the Port of Antwerp executives visited Nigeria.
The Belgium officials disclosed this in a meeting with the Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr. Bashir Jamoh.
The visiting team of
executives from the Port of Antwerp International had sought an audience with the
NIMASA Director-General to follow up investment interests in Nigeria.
Speaking at the meeting, the NIMASA boss said there were huge
opportunities for investment in wreck removal and recycling, stressing that the
Federal Government is planning a coordinated wreck removal policy to drive
investment in the area.
A
statement signed by the Head of
Corporate Communications of NIMASA,
Philip Kyanet noted that the Managing Director of APEC-Antwerp/Flanders
Port Training Centre and Port of Antwerp International, Mr. Kristof
Waterschoot, and Director at Port of Antwerp International, Mr. Mario Lievens,
said they were also in Nigeria to promote new partnership opportunities,
especially in the area of training.
Waterschoot and Lievens, who
hosted Jamoh at the Nigerian Belgian Chamber of Commerce, Onikan, Lagos, said
their mission was to discuss projects of interest, including inland ports, and
to strengthen the relationship between the Port of Antwerp and NIMASA, particularly
in the areas of training, technical support, and cooperation.
They noted Nigeria’s proposed National Maritime Transport Policy, and
said the policy was being watched as it unfolded to see how Belgium could come
in with investments.
“We believe in Nigeria,”
said Waterschoot, who observed that the business climate in Nigeria could be
difficult, but there was hardly any country without its peculiar
difficulties.
A National Maritime Transport Policy is in the works in Nigeria as part
of the government’s effort to develop maritime infrastructure and diversify the
oil-dependent economy.
Minister of State for
Transportation, Senator Gbemisola Saraki, told a recent stakeholders’
validation forum on the draft policy that the policy, when approved, would lead
to improved Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) inflow and enhance the ability of
the Nigerian maritime sector to compete at the international level.
Jamoh praised the long-standing diplomatic and economic relationship
between Nigeria and Belgium. He highlighted the Federal Government’s abiding
interest in diversifying the economy, saying the development of maritime
infrastructure is part of the government’s economic diversification drive.
Jamoh stated, “The National Maritime Transport Policy, which is being developed,
is part of a wider agenda purposed to build alternatives to oil. The maritime
sector is consciously being opened for investment by local and foreign
investors to build a sustainable blue economy.
“One area I would like the Belgian private sector to come in is wreck
removal and wreck recycling. There is a huge investment opportunity there, and
there is also a big room for collaboration. This is more so as the Federal
Government is planning a coordinated policy on wreck removal.”
Jamoh also sought Belgium partnership in the sea-time training of
Nigerian seafarers and in the area of port safety and port security.
The Port of Antwerp International is a subsidiary of Port of Antwerp,
Europe’s second-largest port – after Port of Rotterdam in the Netherlands. It
was established to expand the activities of the Port of Antwerp beyond Europe
through consultancy, management solutions, investment projects, and training.
No comments:
Post a Comment