Nigerian Ports Authority

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Nigerian Ports Authority
AbbreviationNPA
Formation1954; 70 years ago (1954)
PurposeRegulate the ports industry of Nigeria
HeadquartersNigerian Ports Authority, 26/28 Marina, Lagos.
Official language
English
Managing Director
Mohammed Bello-Koko
Websitenigerianports.gov.ng
Nigerian ports authority, CMS

The Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) is a federal government agency that governs and operates the ports of Nigeria. The major ports controlled by the NPA include: the Lagos Port Complex and Tin Can Island Port in Lagos; Calabar Port, Delta Port, Rivers Port at Port Harcourt, and Onne Port. Operations of the NPA are carried out in affiliation with the Presidency of (Nigeria) and the Nigerian Shippers' Council.[1] The Head office of the Nigerian Ports Authority is located in Marina, Lagos.[2]

However, with the concessioning programme of the federal government, which is aimed at promoting efficiency through, public and private partnership, the Nigerian Ports, has since 2005, being concessioned.

This landlord arrangement as they call it, has fostered better relationship and high turn-out of goods and services in and around the Nigerian Port system either in the Eastern or the ever-busy Western zone.

History

Flag of the Nigerian Ports Authority (1955–1960)

The Nigerian Ports Authority started operating in April 1955 following the implementation of the Ports Act of 1954.[3] In the beginning, the public corporation managed only the Lagos and Port Harcourt ports while some private companies managed the remaining Nigerian ports. In addition to managing cargo handling, quay and berthing facilities at the Lagos and Port Harcourt ports, the initial law also gave it the responsibility of managing harbours and approaches to all ports in the country. By 1963 the firm had grown successfully, it was operating a cargo ship from Lagos to Port Harcourt and also began dredging the Bonny terminal for oil operations.[4] In the same year, the firm issued a £4.3 million loan stock in London.

From 1962 - 1968, under the Nigerian Development plan, the length of the quays was expanded and additional warehouses and cargo handling equipment were added. During the Nigerian Civil War that lasted from 1967-1969, only the Lagos Port was functioning and some parts of the port in Port Harcourt was damaged. In 1969, a new decree added Burutu, Calabar and Warri ports to its jurisdiction.[3] The firm took control of the Warri port from John Holt and Burutu from UAC. However, by the early 1970s, the Lagos port was battling congestion. In 1973, the corporation entered into an agreement with the World Bank to finance expansion of facilities within the ports.

Cement armada

In 1974, the Nigerian Ministry of Defense began a program of building various barracks to house almost all of its soldiers. Towards the end of the year, the Ministry began a process of issuing offers to various companies for cement delivery. Though less than 3 million tonnes of cement was needed yearly, the ministry ended up offering letters of delivery for 16 million tonnes to be delivered within a year.[5] Other government agencies such as the Federal Housing Authority and the Nigerian National Supply Company also ordered about 4 million tonnes of cement to be delivered within a year. By the end of November 1974 to late 1975, about 400 cement ships berthed at the Lagos port leading to unprecedented congestion and increasing the turn around time of hundreds of ships to 180 days.

Expansion

NPA accelerated the expansion of port facilities after the end of the cement armada. The government spent over 190 million

naira to complete the Tin Can Island port with two roll on roll off facilities. It built a third wharf in Apapa and expanded facilities at the Warri and Calabar ports. It also constructed three lighter terminals in Kiri Kiri, Onne and Ikorodu.[6]

Concessioning

During the administration of Olusegun Obasanjo, a ports reform program was put in place to reduce inefficiency at the ports. The result was the concessioning of about 24 terminals to private operators for a certain period of time. NPA will continue to act as the landlord and provide common user facilities, technical oversight and other marine services. The private operators will be involved in loading and offloading of cargoes.[7]

Facilities

Lagos Port Complex

This is the Apapa port in Lagos. Together with the Tin Can Island Port, it serves mainly Lagos and western Nigeria.[8] The Lagos Port Complex serves as the major economic door to the nation.

Tin Can Island Port

Tin Can Island Port at Lagos was hastily constructed in 1976 to ameliorate the problems of the 1975 'cement armada' crisis. It was commissioned on 14 October 1977 at a total cost of N200 million and comprised [9] 10 berths and 2.5 kilometres of hard quay.

Calabar Port

Located in the southeast corner of the country in Cross River State, Calabar is the home of the Eastern Naval Command of the Nigerian Navy. This is the longest serving port and also the oldest seaport in Nigeria. Port facilities are located 55 nautical miles up the Calabar River.[10]

Delta Port

Delta Port, Rivers Port and Onne Port are located in the

Forcados.[11]

Rivers Port/Port Harcourt

The Rivers Port Complex in coastal Rivers State comprises Port of Port Harcourt, Okrika Refined Petroleum Oil Jetty, Haastrup/Eagle Bulk Cement Jetty, Kidney Island Jetty, Ibeto Jetty, Macobar Jetty and Bitumen Jetty. Management of port operations at Port Harcourt itself has been commissioned out to two port operators, Ports and Terminal Operators and BUA Ports and Terminal, it is not operated by the NPA.[12] Like Delta State, Rivers State is a principal petroleum-producing region of Nigeria.

Onne Port

companies have licenses to work at Onne Port; as an economic free zone it serves as a hub port for oil and gas operations throughout West Africa and Central Africa.[13]

See also

References

  1. ^ Maritime Organisation of West and Central Africa, Nigeria Archived 2010-05-05 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Nigerian Ports Authority, Contact us". Archived from the original on 2017-09-08. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  3. ^ a b "Periscope:Nigerian Ports Authority". Business Times. Lagos. March 1, 1982. p. 15.
  4. ^ The Nigerian Ports Authority. The Financial Times (London, England),Thursday, October 01, 1964; pg. 13; Edition 23,430
  5. ^ Supo Ibikunle (January 1976). "Cement Armada on Nigerian Waters". Spear Magazine. Lagos. p. 6.
  6. ^ H., M. "N1bn Dock Expansion Outlay Keeps Pace with Demand." Financial Times [London, England] 30 Sept. 1980: XXXVII. Financial Times. Web. 3 Apr. 2016
  7. ^ Emeka Okwuosa. (2006). "Nigeria Ports Concessioning Policy And Legal Implications." Tuesday, 7 Mar. 2006. Retrieved April 4, 2016
  8. ^ "Nigerian Ports Authority, Our Ports, Lagos Port Complex". Archived from the original on 2017-04-15. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  9. .
  10. ^ "Nigerian Ports Authority, Our Ports, Calabar Port". Archived from the original on 2016-03-11. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  11. ^ "Nigerian Ports Authority, Our Ports, Delta Port". Archived from the original on 2016-12-03. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  12. ^ "Nigerian Ports Authority, Our Ports, Rivers Port". Archived from the original on 2016-03-10. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
  13. ^ "Nigerian Ports Authority, Our Ports, Onne Port". Archived from the original on 2016-12-03. Retrieved 2009-01-25.