Home » NIMASA DG Charges African Countries to Develop Maritime Infrastructure

NIMASA DG Charges African Countries to Develop Maritime Infrastructure

The Director General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr. Dakuku Peterside has stated thatΒ with the potentials of the African maritime sector,Β competitive operating environment,Β proper regulation, incentivesΒ and infrastructural development;Β Africa would be the next maritime investment haven.

Dr. Peterside who made this knownΒ while speaking on the theme β€œPromoting Sustainable Investment and Financing In Africa’s Shipping & Maritime Industry” at the Africa Maritime Summit held during the London International Shipping WeekΒ 2017Β in the United Kingdom,Β stated thatΒ Africa’s share of import Β and export via world container throughput is on the increaseΒ  annually.

The NIMASA DG who is also the Chairman of the Association of African Maritime Administrations (AAMA) however regretted that Africa is still not a major player globally in maritime trade because of lack of strategic attention to the sector and pointed out that despite operating one of the largest ship registries in the world in Liberia; Africans do not own vessels to match the corresponding statistics of the large registry.

According to Dr Peterside “We are not among top ten ship owning countries, we are not suppliers of maritime professionals and we are also not a ship financing continent. While an AfricanΒ country is among top 10 global ship registries because LiberiaΒ operates an open registry, Africans do not own vessels. In fact African countries pay 40%-70% more freight on imports and exports due to poor infrastructure, high cost of insurance, piracy, low vessel owning capacity and poor ship connectivity” he said.

 

The NIMASA DG also noted thatΒ ShipΒ or Vessel building as well as repairs and maintenance activities are near zero contribution to GDP of the continent. He urged African countries to invest in maritime infrastructure, cooperateΒ among themselves and explore a continentalΒ Cabotage regimeΒ as recommended in the African Maritime Transport Charter for the benefit of intra continent trade.

He said immeasurable factsΒ haveΒ proven Africa as the next Maritime investment Haven, adding thatΒ 38 of 54 African nations are either coastal or islandΒ states. HeΒ further mentioned that the continent is one of the most endowed continents in terms mineral resources with 27% of the World’s arable lands.

β€œBecause of our coastlineΒ of about 30,725km hosting 90 major portsΒ and our arable lands,Β Africa willΒ continue to export Agricultural produce. Marine Transport accounts for 92% of Africa’s external trades and import, but Africa handles only 6% of globalΒ seaborne traffic with 6 ports inΒ Egypt and South Africa handling 50% of this volume” he said.

Dr. Peterside pointed out that to advance the?Β Intra-Continent trade accounts;Β countries mustΒ investΒ inΒ new ports and terminals infrastructure, ship building, recycling, ownership and maintenanceΒ which areΒ conservatively estimated at $14.2Billion annually. He further stated that there was need for a robust financing regime of the requirementsΒ for 13 Sub-Saharan Africa countries transport infrastructure,Β whichΒ is estimated to be $6.4 Billion and advised countries around the continent to addressΒ the acute dearth of relevant professionals in the sector.

It would be recalled that Dr. Peterside since election as the Chairman of AAMA during the 3rdΒ conference of the association which was held in Abuja had always advocated for collaborative efforts of all AfricanΒ countries in order to grow the continent’s maritime industry. He has continued to champion the cause for Africa to remain aΒ bloc at the international front

About Author

Spread the love