…Approves only 3 deep seaports
…Ibom project delights investors
Federal Government has approved a 50 year concession period for Ibom Deep Sea Port (IDSP) to help attract investors, as stakeholders have declared the project most viable in the West and Central African region.
Both the Federal Ministry of Transport and the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC) which confirmed the long concession period, during the week, at the Ibom Deep Sea Port stakeholders visioning workshop, affirmed that only three deep seaports in Nigeria have been captured in the nation’s port development master plan.
The three deep sea ports are: Ibom Deep Seaport in Akwa Ibom State, Badagry Deep Sea port and Lekki Deep Seaport, both in Lagos State.
Speaking at the occasion, the Director-General of ICRC, Mr. Aminu Diko, who charged the promoters and managers of the IDSP to make bare areas of comparative advantages and threats the proposed seaports have in comparison with other government approved deep seaports in the country, added, “We have approved three deep sea ports. We approved Ibom Deep Seaport 18 months ago, and in the process the promoters of Badagry Deep Sea Port came and submitted proposal and got approval. In June this year, we got application for Bakasi Deep Sea Port and I make it clear that we are most likely to approve any port without seeing its viability.”
In his intervention, the representative of Federal Ministry of Transport, Director of Procurement, Mr. Shehu Aliyu, said that IDSP had become exigent at this time in history of the nation to help curb the incidence of port and road congestion in Lagos.
Reiterating that the Federal Government had only approved three deep seaports in line with the port master plan, he added that the government had been on IDSP for five years, with the project’s Outline Business Case (OBC) approved by the Federal Executive Council (FEC).
The Chairperson, Technical Committee for the Realisation of Ibom Deep Seaport, Barr. (Mrs.) Mfon Usoro, in her interventions at the stakeholders’ visioning workshop, stated that even when all the approved deep seaports become operational, IDSP would still have sufficient cargo and sound throughput to remain viable.
According to her, the port was strategically located in the West and Central Africa region, despite the existing ports and emerging ones. It will serve the cargo needs of the following countries; JDZ Sao Tome, Equatorial Guinea, Cameroon, Angola, Gabon, Republic of Congo DRC, Chad, and Niger.
Usoro also asserted that the IDSP being built on government equity and shareholding model under Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV), Port Development Management Company (PDMC) would service the South-South, South-East and North-East geographical regions of Nigeria with well-planned rail and road network.
Equity participation in the project was conceived as: Akwa-Ibom state, 20 percent; private sector, 60 percent, while 20 percent stake is floating for interested private investors or other state governments within the region to grab.
The IDSP, which is situated on 2,565 hectares of land and has a container capacity of 9 million TEUs, is an integral part of the proposed large Ibom industrial city, which collectively is located on a 14, 000 hectare of land.
The industrial city will provide immediate cargo need to the IDSP, which comes in two phases, with incentives for investors, Usoro said.
According to the Project’s Transaction Adviser, Global Maritime And Port Services Pte Ltd (GMAP) of Singapore, led by its Vice President, SuBoon Hui Frederick, IDSP has two way access channels and was designed for container vessel of 100, 000 Deadweight (DWT) and 15 meters draught as well as 48m Beam.
With construction billed to commence in 2018 and completion time given as between 2020 and 2021, concessionaries are at liberty to sub-concession a facility at the port and repatriate their funds at will as special investment incentives granted by the Nigerian Investment Promotion Council (NIPC) and Nigerian Export Promotion Zone Authority (NEPZA).
GMAP listed the objectives of IDSP to include: To augment the existing port capacity and ease of doing business, to accelerate industrialization and economic activity, to be the premier maritime hub in West and Central Africa.
Present at the stakeholders visioning workshop, were different potential investors, such as Bolore Logistics Africa, Akwa Ibom State Government, represented by a team of Commissioners in the state, host communities; some observer investors who pleaded anonymity, among others.
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