The Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) has successfully secured a $700 million loan facilitated by Citibank and underwritten by UK Export Finance (UKEF) to overhaul the Apapa and Tin-Can Island ports in Lagos.
Concurrently, NPA is engaging with another financier to support the refurbishment of Eastern Ports, including facilities in Calabar, Warri, Onne, and Rivers, along with the reconstruction of the Escravos breakwater.
During the mandate letter signing ceremony in Lagos on Wednesday, NPA’s Managing Director, Mohammed Bello-Koko, emphasized the urgency of the upgrades. He announced that the funds were ready, and reconstruction work in Lagos would commence promptly. Additionally, Bello-Koko revealed plans to finalize another funding agreement for the Eastern Ports within the next month.
“In the last two years, NPA has realised the need for us to rehabilitate and reconstruct the ports all over the country. We have been having discussions with multilateral funding agencies who have sent various proposals that we have reviewed.
“What we did is to further discussion with interested parties and we realised it is better to separate the ports in Lagos from the ports in the East, and we are in discussion with other funding agencies to fund the construction of ports outside Lagos,” he said.
According to him, the Citibank facility is the cheapest for the Ports Authority because its comes with affordable interest rates.
“Port efficiency is not about automation which we have already begun, it’s also about the physical infrastructure, which must be in place and that’s why we are automating. Automation will naturally bring efficiency, increase revenue and plug leakages, ” he said.
Bello-Koko said that the NPA is putting Port Community System in place, which is a platform that will improve trade facilitation.
“Currently in Nigeria, importers or exporters fill up to 30 to 40 forms for one transaction but the Port Community System will reduce the numbers of forms, human interference and ensure speedy clearance process in or out of the country,” he added
Earlier, managing director of Citibank Nigeria Limited, Ireti Samuel-Ogbu, said the bank is committed to supporting NPA and the federal government in bridging infrastructure gaps.
“We are absolutely delighted to be partnering with NPA especially being the collection bank for foreign and local currency port levies. Now, supporting this strategic initiative through export credit financing to upgrade port infrastructure in Tin-Can and Lagos Ports is commendable. However, we are committed in supporting NPA and the Nigerian Government in all its endeavors especially in the infrastructure space.
According to her, Citibank was opportune to have met with Wale Edun, Minister of Finance, a few weeks ago where the port upgrading project was mentioned and he was very delighted about the project.
“Since NPA generates its own foreign revenue, we will be able to support foreign facility from our resources because this project is very strategic and an important project for NPA and the country at large.
“We are looking forward to this project and we thank NPA for giving us this opportunity and hope to bring this into fruition as soon as possible,” Samuel-Ogbu said.