Sifax Group CEO, Taiwo Afolabi
The Chairman of SIFAX Group, Dr Taiwo Afolabi has once again, called on the Federal Government to rehabilitate and expand the capacity of Nigeria’s eastern ports of Port Harcourt, Onne, Calabar, Warri and Forcados to give the region an economic sense of belonging in the comity of maritime world.
Explaining more while receiving Dr. Akutah Pius Ukeyima, Executive Secretary/Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian Shippers Council, at the SIFAX Group’s head office in Lagos, he averred that the upgrading of eastern ports will also stimulate economic activities in the axis and decongest the Lagos ports.
He argued that the lack of attention for the country’s eastern ports over the years has continued to negatively affect the country’s overall port efficiency, saying “My passionate appeal to the government is to extend the port modernisation initiative to the eastern ports. As you can see, economic activities at the ports are on the increase year on year”. The concentration of these activities is predominantly at the Lagos ports, and the facilities at these ports have been stretched to their limits, thereby leading to congestion, which will ultimately impact port efficiency.
“This is the time for the government to resuscitate those ports in the Eastern part of Nigeria. For instance, government needs to dredge the Warri, Onne and Calabar ports so that large vessels can berth there safely and reduce the pressure on the Lagos ports.”
The SIFAX Group boss further noted that the Tincan Island Port corridor has long struggled under the weight of traffic volumes it was never designed to sustain and that the gridlock along that axis has become a recurring cost for businesses, a source of frustration for transporters, and a drag on the economy.
Ukeyima lauded the contribution of Dr. Taiwo Afolabi and SIFAX Group, which he described as one of the leading maritime investors in Nigeria, adding that the conglomerate has taken advantage of the maritime value chain to contribute substantially to the economic growth of Nigeria.
