By Uche Usim

THE newly set up Implementation Committee to mid­wife the establishment of a new national carrier has hit the ground running by immediately engaging in wide consultation with relevant stakeholders, including in­vestors few days after it was inaugurated.

The committee has also set up sub-committees saddled with sourcing imperative data needed to take informed decisions towards establishing a new national fleet that would be beneficial to the private investors, government and Nigeria as a whole.

In an exclusive interview with Daily Sun Monday, the Committee’s Chairman, Hassan Bello said the Transport Ministry was bent on helping to diversify the nation’s economy using the maritime sector as the springboard.

He said the new national fleet will create thousands of jobs, boost government revenue and allow Nigeria dictate the pace in international trade policies. Accord­ing to him, a website was being designed not only for effective communication, but to also enable stakehold­ers make inputs which will be collated, analysed and considered as part of the condiments needed in floating a sound national fleet.

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“We’ve a sub-committee that specialises in gathering and analysing various data like that of the ship, that of the cargo, trade routes, new developments in shipping etc. This is to enable us chart the course from an in­formed perspective. What were also doing is trying to know what the government can do to enable the private sector own and operate ships.

So, we’re looking at trade policies. We really have to change certain trade policies. We’re also looking at gaps in our laws. We’ve to enact certain laws. We’re also look­ing at institutional repositioning. For instance, we need to rejig the NIMASA ship registry policy and that other institutional reforms. We’re looking at the totality of ev­erything. We’re already talking with foreign investors and one or two have shown interest in this project”, he explained.

Bello, who doubles as the Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) expressed hopes that the project will succeed as it is a full private sector-driven enterprise that will be insulated from undue govern­ment interference. “One thing that is clear and what is making it a departure from the past is that this is led by the private sector.

The government will not put any money into it. I of­ten say that government has no business in most busi­nesses. So, it’s not the same as former national shipping line. That was purely run as a government business. But here, the implementation committee is dominated by the private sector players. We’ve ship owners, ship op­erators, engineers, ship surveyors, maritime lawyers, etc. So, they’ve private sector mentality and orientation. The Nigerian Shippers’ Council is the link between the private sector and the government”, he noted.

On the challenges facing the project, Bello said: “They’re mainly institutional challenges. Institutions must change. We need to have the mind of a business­man. It’s not the government. When we had the former national carrier (NNSL), it was government dominated and that led to a lot of issues like profligacy, corruption and all that. And so the venture died.”