Maritime
NISA, Others Collaborate On Ship Acquisition
Nigerian ship owners with
their Turkish and Greek counterparts are collaborating on ship acquisition to enable it engage more in international trade.
The President of the Nigerian Ship owners Association (NISA), Capt. Niyi Labinjo, made the disclosure in an interview with our correspondent in Lagos.
Labinjo said that he had met Turkish Ship owners Association on the collaboration, adding that he had very useful discussions with them.
He said that 2,000 Greek ship owners had organised themselves for a meeting with Nigerian ship owners to collaborate on ship acquisition.
“They have the ships and we have the potential.
“Rather than bringing their ships here and getting into trouble by violating the cabotage law, we are going to work out what will be mutually beneficial in line with the provisions of the law.
“The greatest number of ships belong to the Greeks,’’ the mariner said and that Ambassadors of both countries were excited and looking forward to the mutually beneficial consideration.
“My members need ships and I am out to make sure there is an arrangement for them to have ships,’’ the mariner said.
Labinjo lauded the Federal Government for cutting back on issuance of waivers to foreign ship owners willing to operate in Nigerian waters.
He said the association (NISA) had a good relationship with the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA).
He noted that NIMASA had advised shipping service users to engage the services of Nigerian shipping service providers.
According to him, such will provide the indigenous ship owners jobs.
The mariner said the association was grateful that NIMASA had provided it with funds to furnish and renovate its new secretariat.
Labinjo also noted that there was no friction between the association and the organisers of the Nigerian Maritime Expo (NIMAREX).
“NIMAREX is NISA’s baby. NIMAREX is there to plan and submit to us and we approve.
“That we have other stakeholders in NIMAREX does not make NIMAREX not to be our brain-child.
“People should stop thinking NIMAREX is one body different from NISA. It is part of the products of NISA,’’ the mariner said.