THE Institute of Chartered Shipbrokers, Nigeria chapter, has said Nigerian banks lack the financial capacity to fund the purchase of a sea-worthy ship.
The chairman of ICS, Dr Chris Esoba Ebare, in a chat with our correspondent in Lagos on Tuesday, explained that there were many shipwrecks on the nation’s waterways because Nigerian shipowners did not have the capacity to acquire standard ships.
“There is no Nigerian bank today that can give you any loan to buy a good sea-worthy vessel because they don’t have the capacity. How many Nigerian ship owners can acquire a vessel worth $350m or $850m? You mentioned recks on waterways, let me give you a classical example, how much does a new Prado cost in Nigeria today? It is around N50m. With that money, you will get a brand-new Prado that can go to the East or any part of the country you want to go to. If I now give you N1.5m, you will buy a car but not a standard one. That is just the explanation of what is happening,”
Ebare advised Nigerian ship owners to collaborate with their foreign counterparts in the acquisition of standard ships.
“What they need is to collaborate with these big foreign shipping companies that have the financial muscles. Open the Cabotage Law, let it be free for all, so that our ship owners can collaborate with these people and partner those ones that can lend them money.”
He blamed insecurity for being responsible for a drop in cargo exports in Nigeria.
“First and foremost, the major reason for the drop in cargo is insecurity in the country. Some of my friends that used to export cashew nuts from the North-Central and the North-East can no longer go there. For a whole month, local farmers could no longer go to these places and harvest these food products and export them. These are some of the challenges. Before now, exporters used to export charcoal from the South-East region, but these things are no more there.
“On the issue of lack of ship financing, I will blame it on the rigidity and backwardness of our Cabotage Law. Our Cabotage Law does not help our indigenous ship owners at all. The Cabotage law is too protectionist and it is killing the vessels, economy and the maritime industry. They should open it and let it be free for all,” he said.
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