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NIMASA, Belgium’s Port of Antwerp partner to boost maritime trade

By Sulaimon Salau
22 May 2019   |   4:29 am
The Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), has unveiled plans to partner with the Port of Antwerp in Belgium, to boost trade and encourage foreign direct investment opportunities in the Nigerian maritime sector.

[FILE PHOTO] Dakuku Peterside, NIMASA Boss

The Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), has unveiled plans to partner with the Port of Antwerp in Belgium, to boost trade and encourage foreign direct investment opportunities in the Nigerian maritime sector.
    
Director-General of NIMASA, Dakuku Peterside, disclosed this when he hosted a team from the Port of Antwerp led by the Director, Africa Port of Antwerp International, Nico Vertongen, in Lagos.
    
Speaking at the meeting, Peterside said the Port of Antwerp had a long standing relationship with the ports community in Lagos, noting that from 2017 till date, 302 vessels have called between the Belgian port and the ports in Lagos.He said within the period, 33 vessels conveyed export goods from the port of Lagos terminating at the Port of Antwerp, with 22 Belgium-flagged vessels calling at Nigerian ports and several other volumes of transaction.

Dakuku said the Agency was willing to consolidate on the gains of the Nigeria-Belgian relationship.“We have always had a business relationship with the port of Antwerp either as destination ports or ports of origin. We are glad to know that you are in Nigeria and planning to lead a business mission sometime in November, to the Lagos Port Community. Our position is straight forward and clear; we welcome the business mission with our doors open and believe there is a lot we can do together,” the DG said.
   
Peterside also said the meeting in November will be the beginning of a mutually-beneficial relationship in diverse ways that will also give opportunities for the exchange of ideas.“It  will also open opportunities for training for our people and it will give you a better understanding of how the ports in Lagos, Nigeria, in Africa work, leading to the volume of trade between ports and other operations,” he added.

He, however, expressed concern about the isolated negative representation of the Nigerian maritime sector in the media, saying efforts were being made to stem it.He told the delegation that the Agency, which has the responsibility to ensure maritime security in the ports and waterways, had put in place a number of strategies, including a legal framework on piracy and maritime crime and acquisition of assets to build up response capability, to stop the pirates and criminals from operating within the coastal waters.
   
“Therefore, in November, we will have the opportunity of setting up business to business meetings; we have a number of Nigeria businesses that are interested in doing business with operators in Belgium, precisely in the ports of Antwerp. And as you have notified us today, we will begin to prepare ship owners in Nigeria; those who have set up ship repair yards, ship building yards, operators and all of those for business to business meeting in November and it is believed that it will be rewarding,” he said.
   
On his part, Vertongen, said the delegation planned to come to Nigeria in November on a business mission, with the intention of boosting the already existing relationship between the ports community in Lagos and the Antwerp port.He also expressed their readiness to partner with the Agency on port security, safety, and also possible areas of training, adding that the meeting will further be an opportunity for the duo to be official partners. 
   
NIMASA has continued to embrace collaboration and partnership, thereby allowing it to fully actualise its dream of creating a robust maritime sector in line with best global practices.

 

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