R-L: Dr. Dakuku Peterside, Director General, Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), with Mr. Jens-Peter Kjemprud, Norwegian Ambassador to Nigeria, Capt. Joseph Owodeha, General Manager, Operations Charkin Maritime and Dr. Mkgeorge Onyung, President of Shipowners Association of Nigeria (SOAN), at the interactive session with the global maritime community today at the ongoing Nor Shipping Conference 2019, in Oslo, Norway.
Nigeria
has invited the entire maritime world to a global security summit to
collaborate in developing a robust maritime security system to combat
the security threats in the Gulf of Guinea.
The
Global Maritime Security Conference (GMSC) which the country will
host in Abuja between October 7 – 9, 2019 will afford the
international community a platform to develop actionable strategies
to finally put an end to piracy and other security threats in the
region.
Dr
Dakuku Peterside, The Director General of the Nigerian Maritime
Administration and Safety Agency, (NIMASA), the country’s maritime
regulator, issued the invitation today at the ongoing Nor Shipping
Conference in Oslo, Norway. He was speaking at a forum for
international investors on the Investment Opportunities in Nigeria’s
Blue Economy.
The
director general said the summit will also afford the international
community an opportunity to tap into the vast investment potentials
in the Nigerian maritime industry. These potentials span ship
building and repairs, fleet development, ship financing, port
infrastructure development, maritime tourism, renewable energy ferry
services, seafarer training, research and development, offshore
logistics for the country’s oil industry, and aquaculture.
Dakuku
noted that “the conference will bring together officials from
international agencies, governments, donor partners, shipping
firms, oil and gas industry, navies and coastguards and maritime
regulators across the globe, to discuss the options for tackling
security challenges in the Gulf of Guinea, an area which accounts for
more than 70 per cent of Africa’s oil and gas production and five
per cent of global proven energy reserves”.
The
objectives of the conference include defining the precise nature and
scope of coordinated regional responses to maritime insecurity,
evaluating the relevance of various external interventions and moving
towards policy harmonisation and regional cooperation. The conference
will also tackle threats to maritime security, strategise alternative
approach to prevent cyber security threats and advocate for deeper
global commitment to the deployment of resources for ending maritime
insecurity within the region in the shortest possible time.
Peterside
said the success of Nigeria in tackling insecurity along its own
stretch of the Gulf has been down to robust investment in
intelligence and maritime security assets as well as the commitment
of the authorities to ending the threats.
These
investments made under Nigeria’s Deep Blue Project will see to
the acquisition of two special mission aircrafts, three helicopters
and unmanned air vehicles. Others are two special mission vessels and
17 interceptor patrol crafts. This is in addition to the land assets
which include 16 armoured vehicles and an intervention team of 340
highly trained personnel. The entire project also takes advantage of
satellite technology to monitor the Nigeria’s exclusive
economic zone and feed real time information to a command and
control centre.
He
said the Nigerian zone of the Gulf has been become relatively free of
security threats and is now relatively safe, a position corroborated
by the Norwegian ambassador to Nigeria, Jens-Petter Kjemprud.
The
ambassador said Nigeria’s tackling of the security issue is so
impressive that for more than a year he has not had call for help
from Norwegian seafarers plying the route. He also commended
President Muhammadu Buhari for setting up a high-powered commission
to decongest the approaches to the Apapa Port, five days after he
raised alarm on the situation. Already, Norway and Denmark have
committed to partner with Nigeria in the organisation of the Global
Maritime Security Conference.
Peterside
said security was only one area of improvement in the maritime
component of the ease of doing business in Nigeria. He pointed at
other interventions to include the building of a modern railway
system to link all the ports to the hinterland, investment in truck
transit parks, fixing of access roads and the reduction of the number
of agencies at the ports.
The
Director General is the Head of the Nigerian delegation, which also
includes ship owners and other stakeholders, to the Nor-Shipping
Conference and Exhibition 2019, a gathering of all major players in
the global maritime industry.
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